8 results on '"DEVELOPMENT economics"'
Search Results
2. Why an early Belt and Road Initiative East Africa hub? Economic, demographic and security factors.
- Author
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Johnston, Lauren and Onjala, Joseph
- Subjects
BELT & Road Initiative ,REGIONAL economics ,DEMOGRAPHIC transition ,REGIONAL development ,DEVELOPMENT economics - Abstract
Purpose: This purpose of this paper is to explore China's choice to focus early Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) Africa outreach on Eastern Africa. The BRI specifically seeks to achieve ten economic and policy objectives, as outlined in the two launch speeches of 2013. In terms of realising these, the economic development and digitisation levels, that progress of the demographic transition, and the important security context of the sub-region, logically make East Africa relatively important to BRI in continental context. Kenya specifically is important in being an African frontier therein, and, also, because it shares a few important borders with landlocked countries, including Ethiopia, Sudan and Uganda, alongside a strategic coast and ports. From this lens, as well the fact that in the Ming Dynasty Chinese fleets reached what is modern-day Kenya, China's early BRI outreach to Africa having had a historical precedent in initially focusing on Eastern Africa, might be usefully understood. Design/methodology/approach: To realise that aim a comprehensive survey of related literature and policy documents, in Chinese, English and Swahili, was undertaken and relevant data compiled and analysed. Findings: To the best of the authors' knowledge, first, this paper is the first to argue that the Belt and Road Initiative in Africa may build on abstract long-run logic in terms of economics, demographic change and security. This provides a contrary perspective to the pre-existing established "debt trap diplomacy" and no consistent logic narratives. Second, it is the first to offer a synthesised analysis of the BRI in Africa, East Africa specifically, looking across economic, demographic and security angles. Research limitations/implications: The paper is a synthesis of development and regional economics literature that forges some prospective rationales only. It is not an empirical research paper drawing very specific and definitive conclusions. Practical implications: Amid widespread geo-economic tensions and uncertainty, around the Belt and Road Initiative in particular, this paper offers a new economic development-oriented logic for the choice of an important node of the China's Belt and Road Initiative, that of East Africa, Kenya especially. This may impact existing related narratives and policy responses. Social implications: Equivalently to the above this may then have an impact on the ground in East Africa and beyond. Originality/value: The first such or even close to synthesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The role of short-term changes in cognitive capacity on economic expenditure among Kenyan agro-pastoralists.
- Author
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Iles, Richard A., Surve, Aditi, Kagundu, Samuel, and Gatumu, Haniel
- Subjects
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ECONOMIC decision making , *SOCIAL scientists , *COGNITIVE ability , *FLUID intelligence , *DEVELOPMENT economics , *DISASTER resilience - Abstract
The increased exposure of pastoralist communities in East Africa to climatic shocks has focused attention on the resilience of these communities. Although many social scientists directly or indirectly infer versions of homo-economic agents, increasing evidence in development behavioral economics, indicates that such assumptions may be misplaced. Despite on-going advances in the science concerning the effects of stress on dynamic changes in short-term cognitive capacity, there remains limited understanding of the effects of changes in cognitive capacity on economic decision making. The present research empirically evaluates the drivers of short-term changes in cognitive capacity–cognitive ability and heuristic use–and its effect on crop and livestock expenditure among predominantly poor Kenyan agro-pastoralists. Three rounds of cognition and survey data from Samburu, Kenya is analysed. The primary data was collected at the end of the 2015–16 East African drought and covers an 11-month period between October 2016 and September 2017. Dynamic panel estimation, employing maximum likelihood, is used on balanced and unbalanced data. Results indicate that fluid intelligence and heuristic use, along with literacy and stressors, affect crop expenditure. Perceptions of scarcity, relative to prior expectations, are also identified as an important determinant of short-term changes in cognitive ability. These results underscore the importance of better understanding the effects of short-term changes in cognitive capacity on economic expenditure among the poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Holding back from theory: limits and methodological alternatives of randomized field experiments in development economics.
- Author
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Favereau, Judith and Nagatsu, Michiru
- Subjects
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DEVELOPMENT economics , *BEHAVIORAL economics , *EXPERIMENTAL economics , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *MACHINE learning - Abstract
In this paper, we critically and constructively examine the methodology of evidence-based development economics, which deploys randomized field experiments (RFEs) as its main tool. We describe the context in which this movement started, and illustrate in detail how RFEs are designed and implemented in practice, drawing on a series of experiments by Pascaline Dupas and her colleagues on the use of bednets, saving and governance in Kenya. We show that this line of experiments have evolved to address the limitation of obtaining policy-relevant insights from RFEs alone, characterized as their lack of external validity in the literature. After examining the two prominent responses by leading figures of evidence-based development economics, namely machine learning and structured speculation, we propose an alternative methodological strategy that incorporates two sub-fields, namely experimental economics and behavioral economics, to complement RFEs in investigating the data-generating process underlying the treatment effects of RFEs. This strategy highlights promising methodological developments in RFEs neither captured by the two proposals nor recognized by methodologists, and also guides how to combine different sub-fields of economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology Researchers Describe New Findings in Business Economics and Social Development (The Moderating Role of Procurement Governance on The Relationship Between Supply Chain Agility And Service...).
- Subjects
MANAGERIAL economics ,SOCIAL development ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
A new report from researchers at Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology in Kenya explores the relationship between supply chain agility, procurement governance, and service delivery in the public healthcare sector. The study found that procurement governance plays a significant moderating role in this relationship, with hospitals needing to establish rules and policies that prioritize transparency and accountability in the procurement process. The research provides valuable insights for researchers, policymakers, and residents of the four counties in the western region of Kenya. The full article can be accessed for free through the International Journal of Business, Economics, and Social Development. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
6. Invitation Choice Structure Has No Impact on Attendance in a Female Business Training Program in Kenya.
- Author
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Diwan, Faizan, Makana, Grace, McKenzie, David, and Paruzzolo, Silvia
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BUSINESSWOMEN , *GOVERNMENT programs , *SMALL business , *DECISION making , *CHOICE (Psychology) , *TRAINING - Abstract
Business training programs are a common form of support to small businesses, but organizations providing this training often struggle to get business owners to attend. We evaluate the role of invitation choice structure in determining agreement to participate and actual attendance. A field experiment randomly assigned female small business owners in Kenya (N = 1172) to one of three invitation types: a standard opt-in invitation; an active choice invitation where business owners had to explicitly say yes or no to the invitation; and an enhanced active choice invitation which highlighted the costs of saying no. We find no statistically significant effect of these alternative choice structures on willingness to participate in training, attending at least one day, and completing the course. The 95 percent confidence interval for the active treatment effect on attendance is [−1.9%, +9.5%], while for the enhanced active choice treatment it is [−4.1%, +7.7%]. The effect sizes consistent with our data are smaller than impacts measured in health and retirement savings studies in the United States. We examine several potential explanations for the lack of effect in a developing country setting. We find evidence consistent with two potential reasons being limited decision-making power amongst some women, and lower levels of cognition making the enhanced active choice wording less effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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7. Mobile Money, Smallholder Farmers, and Household Welfare in Kenya.
- Author
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Kikulwe, Enoch M., Fischer, Elisabeth, and Qaim, Matin
- Subjects
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CELL phones , *ACCESS to information , *BANKING industry , *REGRESSION analysis , *HOUSEHOLDS , *INCOME - Abstract
The use of mobile phones has increased rapidly in many developing countries, including in rural areas. Besides reducing the costs of communication and improving access to information, mobile phones are an enabling technology for other innovations. One important example are mobile phone based money transfers, which could be very relevant for the rural poor, who are often underserved by the formal banking system. We analyze impacts of mobile money technology on the welfare of smallholder farm households in Kenya. Using panel survey data and regression models we show that mobile money use has a positive impact on household income. One important pathway is through remittances received from relatives and friends. Such remittances contribute to income directly, but they also help to reduce risk and liquidity constraints, thus promoting agricultural commercialization. Mobile money users apply more purchased farm inputs, market a larger proportion of their output, and have higher profits than non-users of this technology. These results suggest that mobile money can help to overcome some of the important smallholder market access constraints that obstruct rural development and poverty reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Cash Handouts Give Kenyans a Leg Up.
- Author
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Yoon, Sangwon
- Subjects
TRANSFER payments ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,CHARITIES ,INTERNATIONAL relief ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article looks at economic assistance to poor households in developing countries, reporting on research indicating that cash transfers can be more effective than in-kind distributions such as food aid in raising the income and wealth of the poor. It profiles the work of economists Michael Faye and Paul Niehaus on this topic as well as the for-profit firm Segovia Technology they co-founded, which develops software allowing facilitating direct cash transfers.
- Published
- 2015
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