Charles Harvey .. Macroeconomics for Africa. Heinemann London. 197' . 2.40pp .£2.50 In his preface, Mr. Harvey tells ue: "All good macroeconomic textbooks are set in the context of a part:l.- cdar country ... it fJ.i7 difficult to teach macroecOllol!licl!lin anglo- phone Africa using British or. American textbookS. "The structure of African econo- mies is so fundamentally d,ifferetlt in some respects from the atru'c- ture of, saYf the BritiSh economy, that pa.rts ot established theory simply do not apply and may indeed be poeitively misleading"_ (})_x1ii) Since much of macroeconomic theory hal!fbeen denl()~f4 and refined in the context of ad'vaxlced econolllieisand is littel'Od with ceterie paribus reservations, quite rightly points to the difficulties arising tional macroeconomic textbooks in economic and "The sti~dElnt learn a the approach and contents leave much to be desired. By the author's own admission, his approach is anything but original: " •••it may be unfair to put a new approach into something called a textbook ••• On the whole I have been slightly cautious. It is to be hoped that future texts will be able to be more adventurous ••• " (p.xiv) (emphasis added). Eyen though thb diSClaimer is a disappointing anti-climax to the claims made in the earlier part of the preface, it does illustrate the true state of the author's approach and craft. What Mr. Harvey haa actually done in this slim volume i.$ to graft on to the ccnventional elementary macroeconomic the.orY eOlleCrude bututlef'ul data and intltitutional details about the Zambian economY to explain, as he claims in the sub- title, "the working of pretlent-day African economiee". Given the eelf-illlposedlimitation of "the use of a mainly Zambian context", the title as well as the sub-title of the book are crude reilinders that African economies are identical - so much 80 that a book dealing exclusively with the economy of one country (in this case Zambia) can without any qualm be labelled as Macroeconomics fOr Africa and indeed be recommended as a text for students at Universities in African countries as far apart as Malawi and Nigeri.a. There is yet another self-imposed limitation with equally odd consequences. Since the author assumes nothing more than tl a knowledge of simple algebra and graphS", the method of exposition is ~seentially verba1, with very moderate use of arithmet.ic, graphe and .algebra.Calculus is not used at all ..ad ~hegrapbs a!'l:d diagrams that are employed sparingly are not difficult. In tact, the useo! mathematical analyei.s is limited to threediagrl'l.llls Cot which the first two are the usual 4;0 diagrall!sof the eimple linear consumption function and the third dep~ct.$ thePhil1ips curve), the Silllp1ea;1.gebra,of the multiplier, .el,elllLentary~l~it;hll1!etic of 'present-Va:tl;le' ca.lcu1a:tions- ilie.tb ••atical speaking African students in mind ... that .... have done all. elementary introductory course in economics ••• 11 It is 1ndeed difficult to beUeve that in this day and age a serious-lIl:l.nded second-year eCQn~mics student at all.African University should be considered, and deliberately encouraged to remain, a$ inno- cent of-the mathematical techniques as Mr. Harvey appea~$ to do. Have the instructors of economics at ,the Universities in anglo" phone Africa and elsewhere been wasting the time they haye been spending on insisting on knowledge of elementary mathematical techniques as all.admission requirement and on continUAl!y up- grading the level of mathematical analysis as part of training in economics? Surely the author has be~n AWare of this trend both at the University of Zambia and the University of BotsWe,nA and Swaziland - the two institutiOlls'he was associated with in recent years. If he were ever to produce a revised edition ot hie book, it would be advisable to improve the presentation by enlarging thfi!mathematical parts of analysis. Any revised edition would also benefit bominclusioll of a separate chapter on Economic Growth - an important macrO- economic topic which for some unexplained reason is missing from the present edition. Who is likely to beneti t from this 1;oo1t? Any fit