ECONOMIC CRISES IN PORTUGUESE-SPEAKING AFRICAN COUNTRIES: a study based on the effects of Structural Adjustment Programs in Angola and Guinea-Bissau: 1990 - 2010.
The present work has the initial purpose of discussing the economic crisis in Portuguese-speaking African Countries (PALOP) in the 1990s, the different narratives about the use of neoliberal ideologies that emerged in the capitalist world, driven by multilateralism, financial globalization and openness. of the market in every part of the planet during the 90's. As a result, to address different currents of neoliberal thoughts that evaluate, in the economic sphere, the financial progress registered after the institution of this theory. As well as analyzing the impacts of (PAE) in the global south, mainly in Angola and Guinea-Bissau, verifying both positive and negative results. Investigate the role of international institutions (IMF) and (WB) in helping economic development processes in sub-Saharan Africa. Then draw the economic profiles of some states in sub-Saharan Africa during post-independence industrialization processes, with an essential focus on the nations under study. Therefore, in the course of this dissertation, bibliographic research was carried out that revisited the works of economists who discussed the most diverse models of political and socioeconomic thoughts that dialogue with the theme in question.