
The fictional coastal nation of Veridia — rich in natural gas, poor in infrastructure, 2024.
Dr. Amara Okonkwo, an economist raised in Veridia but trained at the London School of Economics, returns home as a technical advisor to the Ministry of Finance. The country is nearing default on its $6 billion sovereign debt. The IMF has offered a last-chance : privatize the state-owned gas utility, cut public sector wages by 30%, and remove fuel subsidies.
The story’s pivot comes during a tense negotiation at the IMF’s regional headquarters. The mission chief, a pragmatic but unyielding French economist named Delacroix, says: “Your GDP will contract 4% this year. But without reform, it’s 12%.” gdp 242
Amara’s boss, Minister Kofi Mensah, is desperate. “Sign, or we lose all access to international capital markets,” he tells her.
But Amara sees what the spreadsheets don’t show. Her own aunt, a nurse at the public hospital in Port Miriam, already works without gloves or electricity. Removing fuel subsidies will triple transport costs. Rural farmers, already crushed by imported rice dumping, will lose their last buffer. The fictional coastal nation of Veridia — rich
Here’s a short draft story for a course like — focusing on themes like structural adjustment, debt, and local resilience. Title: The Price of Adjustment
That night, Amara receives a text from an anonymous number: “Your aunt’s hospital will be closed Monday if you sign. The people in the fishing villages have started blocking the port.” The country is nearing default on its $6
The draft ends on a choice — not a cliffhanger, but a policy dilemma: Amara stares at two documents: the IMF’s Memorandum of Economic Policies, and her own People’s Adjustment Framework. One is 14 pages. The other, 42. One has the weight of global capital. The other, the whisper of her grandmother’s voice: “The land doesn’t forget who sells it.”