7 results
Search Results
2. Myths and realities about input subsidies in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Ghins, Léopold, Mas Aparisi, Alban, and Balié, Jean
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL development ,AGRICULTURE ,IRRIGATION ,PUBLIC spending ,ECONOMIC development ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
Using a recent public expenditure dataset, this article proposes a 'reality check' of the level and composition of input subsidies in nine African countries between 2006 and 2013. Results show that input subsidies (1) received close to 35% of agricultural-specific expenditure on average and (2) cover a variety of interventions, including investments in capital, such as on-farm irrigation, and in on-farm services, such as inspection or training. Further, the figures show that input subsidies tended to become entrenched in agricultural budgets over time, leading to sub-optimal execution rates, and were primarily funded by the national taxpayer, while donors invested more in public goods. Findings confirm that input subsidies crowded out other spending categories likely to be more supportive of long-term agricultural development objectives. The article concludes that the political economy of input subsidies should be directed to making more concrete efforts to attain a better balance of public expenditure on agriculture. Furthermore, policy-makers should aim to increase the efficiency and policy coherence of input subsidies, since merely abolishing them is likely to be unfeasible in the short term. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A critical assessment of anti‐corruption strategies for economic development in sub‐Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Senu, Oluwafemi
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC administration ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,CORRUPTION ,NEPOTISM - Abstract
Motivation: Many countries in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) experience thwarted economic development and corrupt public administration. As the United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) focuses on implementation mechanisms in SSA, there is a need to examine the causes of the setbacks affecting these mechanisms, looking at the current trends of corruption and their impact on socioeconomic development. Purpose: This article focuses on assessing setbacks in anti‐corruption strategies to advance economic development in SSA, primarily looking at how and in what conditions UNCAC prevents corruption and manages responses in SSA. Approach: This article adopts a descriptive and an explanatory perspective, using case studies of Kenya and Nigeria to explain and show how far the objectives of anti‐corruption strategies have been met, and assessing the causes of setbacks. In this context, the article also explores the challenges facing the UK's Department for International Development (DFID). Conclusions: Socioeconomic development in SSA is hard to separate from maladministration and large‐scale corruption. The findings reveal the gravity of this impact and its interrelated factors of "active" and "benign" corruption. This article concludes that for SSA to create sustainable economic environments, the causes of the failure to stamp out corruption need to be addressed, and dishonesty, maladministration, illicit activities, nepotism curtailed, along with corrupt influences on anti‐corruption legislation. Policy implications: The article concludes that if governance does not prevent the failures of anti‐corruption strategies, an interventionist response will only weaken national endeavours, making it difficult to reach UNCAC's vision of sustainable and corruption‐free economic environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Household Enterprises and Poverty Reduction in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Fox, Louise and Sohnesen, Thomas Pave
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,POVERTY reduction ,SMALL business research ,ECONOMIC development ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Employment in Household Enterprises (HEs) has been an integral part of the recent economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Yet employment and development strategies tend to exclude the sector, despite the fact that households with HEs tend to be richer. A good example is Mozambique, where 34% of households rely on income from this source. Analysis of household livelihoods using panel data shows that starting HEs is associated with upward wealth mobility and poverty reduction, particularly for rural and poorly-educated households. Targeted programmes directed towards the constraints to HE creation, survival and income growth would be likely to enhance the effectiveness of employment and poverty reduction strategies in Mozambique as well as in other low income countries in SSA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Africa's Rising Demand for Wheat: Trends, Drivers, and Policy Implications.
- Author
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Mason, Nicole M., Jayne, T.S., and Shiferaw, Bekele
- Subjects
WHEAT ,URBANIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC demand ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This article analyses trends in wheat consumption and imports in sub-Saharan Africa since 1980, and estimates the economic and demographic determinants of this rising demand for wheat. Results point to rising incomes, growing populations, and increasing women's labour-force participation as key drivers. Urban wheat-expenditure shares generally exceed rural ones and SSA's demand is met largely by imports and partly through domestic production on large-scale farms. Rising demand may therefore entail few farm-non-farm synergies and minimal prospects to spur broad-based economic development. The article concludes by discussing policy options for African countries to meet their staple food needs while also promoting pro-poor agricultural growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Tracking Development in South-East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa: The Primacy of Policy.
- Author
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van Donge, Jan Kees, Henley, David, and Lewis, Peter
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC stabilization ,MACROECONOMICS ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,POVERTY reduction ,FARMERS - Abstract
The Tracking Development project aims to explain the divergences in development outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa and South-East Asia over the past fifty years through the pair-wise comparison of four countries in each region. The development trajectories in South-East Asia revealed that the transition to sustained growth has consistently been associated with policies aimed at (i) macroeconomic stabilisation; (ii) improving life in the rural sector, increasing agricultural productivity and ensuring an ample supply of food; and (iii) liberalising the economy and creating conditions of economic freedom, particularly for peasant farmers and other small actors. In Africa, initiatives in these directions have been taken in some instances, but the simultaneous pursuit of all three policy objectives has not occurred. Most noticeably, policies aimed at macroeconomic stabilisation were pursued in both regions, but whereas in South-East Asia these were associated with policies leading to poverty reduction, this was not the case in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Agrarian Roots of Industrial Growth: Rural Development in South-East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Henley, David
- Subjects
INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,AGRICULTURAL development ,POVERTY reduction ,EXPORTS - Abstract
There is an influential view that South-East Asia's economic success is based on export-oriented industrialisation, and that African states should above all imitate this aspect of Asian development strategy. This article, however, uses evidence from Indonesia, Nigeria, Malaysia and Kenya to argue: (i) that the historical roots of South-East Asian economic success actually lie in pro-poor agricultural and rural development; (ii) that even when it has been pro-rural, as in the case of Kenya, African development strategy has not been pro-poor; and (iii) that pro-poor agricultural development, not export-oriented industrialisation, should be the first priority of African states seeking to achieve sustained growth and poverty reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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