Contents: An overview of structural adjustment programs in Africa, Kwadwo Konadau-Agyemang; Structural adjustment programs and the political economy of development and underdevelopment in Ghana, Kwadwo Konadau-Agyemang, and Baffour Kwaku Takyi; The growth of public debt in a reforming economy, Joe Amoako-Tuffour; Fiscal impacts of structural adjustment, Kojo Appiah-Kubi; From a developmental to a managerial paradigm: Ghana’s administrative reform under structural adjustment programs, Peter Fuseini Haruna; Cocoa production under Ghana’s structural adjustment programs: a study of rural farmers, Kwaku Osei-Akom; Structural adjustment programs and Ghana’s mineral industry, Eric Asa; Impact of structural adjustment policies on forests and natural resource management, Noble T. Donker; Structural adjustment programs and the mortgaging of Africa’s ecosystems: the case of mineral development in Ghana, Charles Anyinam; Structural adjustment programs, human resources and organizational challenges facing labour and policy makers in Ghana, Kwamina Panford; Structural adjustment, policies and democracy in Ghana, Kwame Boafo-Arthur; Migration and remittances: rural households strategies for coping with structural adjustment programs in Ghana, Siaw Akwawua; Rural banking and credit inter-mediation in an era of structural adjustments, Andy C.Y. Kwawukume; Structural adjustment programs and emerging urban forms, Ian E.A. Yeboah; Urban planning and management under structural adjustment, Samuel Aryeetey-Attoh; Structural adjustment and the health care system, Joseph R. Oppong; Adjustment reforms in a poor business environment: explaining why poor institutions persist under Ghana’s reforms, Nicholas Amponsah; Progress in adjustment in Ghana: is growth sustainable?, Robert Armstrong; Alternative methods for evaluating structural adjustment programs, Francois K. Doamekpor; Africa under World Bank/IMF management: the best of times and the worst of times, Kwadwo Konadau-Agyemang;