274 results
Search Results
2. Federalism and development in Nigeria.
- Author
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Arowosegbe, Jeremiah O.
- Subjects
FEDERAL government ,POLITICAL stability ,POLITICAL integration ,POVERTY reduction ,POLITICAL systems ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The federal solution has been widely discussed in relation to political systems where the articulation of major cleavages, differences, and pluralities threatens political integration and stability. The relationship between conflict, development, and federalism, however, has been poorly accounted for in the literature on federalism. Existing theories about the utilitarian value of federalism thus face serious challenges, especially with respect to post‐colonial Africa. The relationship between conflict, economic development, and federalism in the African context needs to be carefully examined from the perspective of governance, as well as the impact they have on society‐state relations. This article discusses the impact of ethno‐linguistic, ethno‐regional, and ethno‐religious conflicts on economic development in Nigeria – informed by the inequalities, insecurity, and poverty prevalent in the country – and examines the relevance of the federal solution for mitigating such centrifugal pressures as well as other divisive and violent tendencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Does infrastructural development foster export upgrading in Africa?
- Author
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Kamguia, Brice, Ndjakwa, Manuella, and Tadadjeu, Sosson
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRICITY pricing , *ECONOMIC development , *PANEL analysis - Abstract
A growing body of literature highlights the importance of export sophistication for economic development. Given the newness of the literature on export sophistication, its determinants are under‐exploited. As a pioneer study, this paper attempts to fill this gap in the literature by examining the effect of infrastructure development on export sophistication. Based on a panel of 45 African countries over the period 2003–2016, the results of the different estimations show that infrastructure, including transport, electricity, ICT and access to water and sanitation, improves export sophistication in Africa. Our results also show that the effect of infrastructure varies at different intervals of the export sophistication distribution. Therefore, improved infrastructure would allow African countries to not only improve their export structure but also achieve sustainable and durable growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Linking Southern Africa to South Africa's exports: New opportunities for regional value chains.
- Author
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Banga, Karishma and Balchin, Neil
- Subjects
VALUE chains ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,ECONOMIC development ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,INDUSTRIAL capacity ,COMPARATIVE advantage (International trade) ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
This study explores the potential for South Africa to become an engine for intra‐regional trade and industrial development in Southern Africa. It focuses on new backward linkages that can be created from South African exports of final products to producers of intermediate inputs in other Southern African countries. We do so by identifying South Africa's lead products, where it has formed its own GVCs, and, in turn, earmarking intermediate inputs used in the production of these lead products. Using Revealed Comparative Advantage and Unit Cost analysis, we identify Southern African countries that could supply the identified imported intermediate inputs more competitively than South Africa's existing partners and kickstart regional integration. We explore issues around the nature of linkages, supplier capabilities and industrial policies in the region, with special reference to the identified product value chains. Focusing on the agricultural sector—a key regional priority with immense potential for industrial growth and large‐scale employment—we also identify existing agricultural lead products in South Africa, and the 'new markets' to which South Africa can export. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Economic transformation in Africa: What is the role of Chinese firms?
- Author
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Calabrese, Linda and Tang, Xiaoyang
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,CAPACITY building ,INFRASTRUCTURE funds ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
African countries face an economic transformation gap. Given the large and growing Chinese presence on the African continent, a fundamental question is whether Chinese firms contribute to, or hinder, economic transformation in Africa. This article conducts a scoping review of over one hundred sources, examining the pathways through which Chinese firms can affect economic transformation. On balance, the literature points to a positive role of Chinese firms. Africa–China trade leads to mixed results, while Chinese investment and infrastructure construction are found to contribute positively to transformation. Chinese firms are also found to support capacity building, spillovers and innovation in African countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Strengthening state capacity in Africa: Lessons from the Washington versus Beijing Consensus.
- Author
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Kalu, Kenneth, Okafor, Oliver Nnamdi, and Lin, Xiaohua
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in China ,PUBLIC institutions ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,CONTINENTS - Abstract
Africa is currently the only continent that is yet to experience sustained industrial growth and structural transformation. The continent's position as the last frontier for industrial growth became clear following the spectacular transformations of the Chinese economy since the late 1970s. While it is often emphasized that Africa must improve its industrial capacities and diversify its economies in order to achieve real growth and development, there is little clarity on the most effective model and strategies for the continent's industrialization. This article conceptually examines the Washington Consensus versus the Beijing development models, and empirically presents their evolution in Africa. Drawing on a modified Fukuyama's state theory which differentiates between the strength of state institutions and the scope of state activities, this article argues that strengthening African states is a prerequisite for the success of any development model. The article provides strategies for strengthening state capacity in African countries from weak to moderately strong states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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7. African agricultural development: How are we contributing?
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL development ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,NATURAL resources ,CONFERENCE papers ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
A database of journal articles and conference papers that cover the economics of agricultural development in Africa during the period 2016–2020 was compiled. These papers are first described in terms of demographic and bibliometric criteria, followed by a network analysis of the main centers of origin and of influence of this research. Finally, three different processes were used to test the policy relevance of the work. These include a simple enumeration of the policy recommendations in a sample of the papers, a megatrend analysis, and a comparison of their focus with the standard narrative of the role of agriculture in economic development. The results show that a large proportion of the literature is not forward‐looking, and is weak on policy relevance. We ignore a number of issues that engage the attention of those concerned with implementing structural change in agriculture across the many very different but very real natural resource, political, social, economic, and technological environments around the continent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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8. Linguistic distance and economic development: A cross‐country analysis.
- Author
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Nakagawa, Mariko and Sugasawa, Shonosuke
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,INTERNATIONAL communication ,PER capita ,LINGUISTICS - Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between access to domestic and international communication and economic development. It does so by constructing two indices of linguistic distance, domestic and international, capturing language acquisition costs, which are higher when acquiring linguistically more distant languages. The domestic linguistic distance index captures the constraints of communication among speakers of different mother tongues within a country, while the international linguistic distance index captures the constraints of global communication via English. This study's results reveal a negative association between domestic linguistic distance and GDP per capita, whereas international linguistic distance has no significant association. Moreover, by investigating the mechanisms of the negative association of the domestic linguistic distance, we find that communication difficulty among different language groups hinders economic development through a channel of less employment requiring communication‐based operations. Furthermore, we determine that the negative association of the domestic linguistic distance may be mainly driven by relatively poor countries such as many in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. The challenge of developing special economic zones in Africa: Evidence and lessons learnt.
- Author
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Rodríguez‐Pose, Andrés, Bartalucci, Federico, Frick, Susanne A., Santos‐Paulino, Amelia U., and Bolwijn, Richard
- Subjects
SPECIAL economic zones ,FOREIGN investments ,OPPORTUNITY costs - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Science Policy & Practice is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. China's Belt and Road Initiative: Implications for intra‐regional trade in Africa.
- Author
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Kalu, Kenneth, Farrell, Carlyle, and Lin, Xiaohua
- Subjects
- *
BELT & Road Initiative , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *ECONOMIC development , *NATURAL resources , *CONSTRUCTION materials , *ECONOMIC development projects - Abstract
This paper considers the prospects and promises of continent‐wide infrastructure projects under China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), and its implications for intra‐regional trade and economic development in Africa. Building on the supply side theory of trade and economic development, and taking cognizance of the impacts of asymmetric market sizes on trade integration, this paper argues that continent‐wide infrastructure projects are perhaps not the biggest constraints to intra‐Africa trade. Consequently, the paper recommends caution in pursuing regional infrastructure projects under the BRI. Given that the economies of most African countries depend largely on natural resources, the BRI could be adopted strategically to establish and manage infrastructure projects that would relax the binding constraints to structural transformation and allow for the development of manufacturing and/or service capabilities in the respective countries, especially in niche areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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11. Digital Readiness Assessment of Countries in Africa: A Case Study Research.
- Author
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Assefa, Shimelis, Rorissa, Abebe, and Alemneh, Daniel
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,BROADBAND communication systems ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
There is an increasing uptake of digital technologies across African countries. Public, private, and government services have adopted and utilized digital technologies to improve work processes, productivity, create jobs, and better service delivery. This short paper seeks to answer these questions: What is the current state of digital readiness in African countries? Do existing digital readiness assessment tools, indicators, or metrics, help to assess the digital readiness of countries in Africa? Analysis of publicly available data from Cisco index of readiness score and Broadband speed ranking by cable.co.uk, reveal that: 1) African countries' digital readiness score is below the global average of 11.96, on a scale of 0 to 25 (except Tunisia with readiness average score of 12.05); and 2) African countries' broadband speed is below the global mean speed of 25Mbps (mean speed of 4.51 and 3.80 Mbps for sub‐Saharan Africa and North Africa, respectively). Second, analysis of various assessment tools show that the existing metrics can't be used as is to diagnose and evaluate Africa's digital readiness. Instead factors such as availability of adequate infrastructure; last‐mile connectivity to homes, schools, businesses, and government agencies; and skill gaps should be considered. The implications of this study are to show the need for an appropriate assessment tools so countries in Africa prioritize efforts to embrace digital readiness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Africa as headwaiter at the dining table of global value chains: Do institutions matter for her participation?
- Author
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Alhassan, Abdulkareem, Zoaka, Joshua Dzankar, and Ringim, Salim Hamza
- Subjects
VALUE chains ,PARTICIPATION ,TAX incidence ,PUBLIC spending ,PROPERTY rights ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Global value chains (GVC) have propelled substantial expansion in international trade across the globe over the last two decades. Yet, the institution–GVC nexus in Africa suffers complete neglect in literature. Therefore, we evaluate the impact of different components of political and economic institutions on backward (BWDGVC), forward (FWDGVC), total GVC participation, and GVC position (upstreamness) in Africa. Using system‐GMM with United Nations Conference on Trade and Development GVC database (UNCTAD‐Eora MRIO) for 47 African countries over the period 2000–2018, the key findings show that the effects of the political and economic institutions on GVC participation are diverse. Specifically, property rights, government spending, monetary freedom, and tax burden negatively affect BWDGVC participation while government integrity, investment freedom, and financial freedom stimulate the BWDGVC. Also, all the components of institutional quality that propel BWDGVC, hinder FWDGVC participation and upstreamness, except investment freedom which promotes both BWDGVC and FWDGVC. Nonetheless, property rights, government integrity, monetary freedom, financial freedom, and tax burden engender total GVC participation, whereas government effectiveness, and investment freedom hinder the total GVC participation. Furthermore, good political institutions promote BWGVC and total GVC but reduce upstreamness. Thus, institutions are fundamental drivers of GVC participation in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Estimating the effect of democracy, governance and militarisation on peace in Africa.
- Author
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Iheonu, Chimere O., Odo, Kingsley O., and Ekeocha, Davidmac O.
- Subjects
QUANTILE regression ,POLITICAL stability ,PEACE ,LEAST squares ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Peace has been deemed paramount to socioeconomic progress and economic development across nations. It is for this reason nations strive to improve the peaceful coexistence of citizens. This study investigates the effect of democracy, governance and militarisation on peace in 43 African countries for the year 2018 in a cross sectional framework. The ordinary least square (OLS), the tobit regression and the quantile regression (QR) where employed as estimation strategies. The empirical result firstly reveal that democracy increases peace in Africa, particularly in countries where the initial level of peace is at its highest level. Secondly, militarisation of Africa reduces peace in the region only in countries where the initial level of peace is at its highest level. Thirdly, the influence of governance on peace in Africa depends majorly on the measure of governance utilized. The control of corruption, government effectiveness and regulatory quality increases peace where the initial level of peace is at its lowest level. Political stability increases peace across the entire quantiles utilized while rule of law increases peace in countries where the initial level of peace is low. In conclusion, governance in general increases peace in the countries where initial level of peace is very low. Policy recommendations based on these findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Enhancing export competitiveness by deeper integration: The case of the East African Community.
- Author
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Si Tou, Wai Kit
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL clusters ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,BALANCE of trade ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Motivation: Many African countries experience persistent trade deficits and are in need of better export strategy. While the East African Community (EAC) performs best in regional integration among the Regional Economic Communities of Africa, it is important to formulate a comprehensive export strategy that harnesses the benefits of deeper regional integration. Purpose: This article analyses the productive capabilities of the five Partner States of the EAC to investigate the potential benefits of greater economic integration. It identifies products that have potential to boost economic development and suggests a regional export strategy. Approach and Methods: The product space framework is used to analyse national productive capabilities. In particular, the trade‐off between the potential benefit of developing a complex product and the difficulty to do so is considered. Findings: Deeper regional integration in the EAC would create opportunities to develop new products and to enhance the competitiveness of existing industries. The bloc could produce more diverse and more sophisticated products. Specifically, the analysis highlights the potential of agro‐processing and chemicals, which is generally in line with the strategic regional industries stated in the EAC Industrialisation Strategy 2012–2032. Policy Implications: Deeper regional integration can help develop products. EAC countries should strengthen co‐operation and leverage their expertise to develop products in clusters of related goods, rather than adopting a scattershot approach, thereby reaping economies of scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Structural transformation—Income inequality nexus in Africa: Does the Developer's dilemma hold?
- Author
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Ibrahim, Muazu, Vo, Xuan Vinh, and Aluko, Olufemi Adewale
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,DILEMMA ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This article examines the developer's dilemma—a seeming quandary emerging from the fact that developing countries simultaneously pursue two different developmental goals: (a) seeking economic development through structural transformation and (b) reducing income inequality. However, the proclivity of increasing income inequality while pursuing structural transformation is often referred to as the developer's dilemma. This study investigates for the presence of this dilemma in Africa using sample splitting and threshold estimation technique. While we find support for the existence of a developer's dilemma, suggesting that structural transformation induces income inequality, the income inequality‐widening effect is disproportionate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Threshold Effects of Financial Sector Development on International Trade in Africa.
- Author
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Sare, Yakubu Awudu
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCE - Abstract
Earlier studies on threshold effects of financial sector development on international trade have relied on rudimentary approach which assumes exogenous inclusion of quadratic square terms of finance. However, findings from such studies are not instructive as it obscures country's unique domestic conditions such as differences in the levels of financial sector development. By relying on 46 countries in Africa over the period 1980–2016, this study employs a sample splitting and threshold estimation approach which allows finance–international trade to be mediated by the level of domestic financial sector development. We find evidence of threshold effects for a number of the countries suggesting that the precise impact of financial development on international trade is threshold–specific given the various indicators of finance. The study highlights that whether finance supports or limits international trade crucially depends on the attainment of a certain threshold which is both country and indicator–specific. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. TRANSDISCIPLINARY DEVELOPMENT AND ADOPTION OF IRRIGATION INNOVATIONS IN AFRICA. LINKAGES TO PRINCIPLES OF CAADP: A COMMENTARY.
- Author
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Phiri, E., Bwalya, M., Froebrich, J., Mweetwa, A.M., Chishala, B.H., Meebelo, N., Shepande, C.M., De Witt, M., and De Clercq, W.
- Subjects
IRRIGATION farming ,AGRICULTURAL innovations ,AGRICULTURAL technology ,AGRICULTURAL development ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,ECONOMIC development ,FOOD security - Abstract
Copyright of Irrigation & Drainage is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Role of ICT in Modulating the Effect of Education and Lifelong Learning on Income Inequality and Economic Growth in Africa.
- Author
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Tchamyou, Vanessa S., Asongu, Simplice A., and Odhiambo, Nicholas M.
- Subjects
CONTINUING education ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC development ,GENERALIZED method of moments ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
This study assesses the role of information and communication technologies (ICT) in modulating the impact of education and lifelong learning on income inequality and economic growth. It focuses on a sample of 48 African countries from 2004 to 2014. The empirical evidence is based on the generalized method of moments. The following findings are established. First, mobile phone and internet each interact with primary school education to decrease income inequality. Second, all ICT indicators interact with secondary school education to exert a negative impact on the Gini index. Third, fixed broadband distinctly interacts with primary school education and lifelong learning to have a positive effect on economic growth. Fourth, ICT indicators do not significantly influence inequality and economic growth through tertiary school education and lifelong learning. These main findings are further substantiated. Policy implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The effects of fragility and financial inequalities on inclusive growth in African countries.
- Author
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Fowowe, Babajide and Folarin, Emmanuel Oludele
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,DEVELOPING countries ,EQUALITY ,ECONOMIC development ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Africa has the largest number and proportion of fragile states in the world. Fragile states are characterized by slower economic growth, higher incidences of poverty, and persistent inequality. Thus, there is a circular relationship between fragility, inequality, and slow economic growth. This study examines the relationship between fragility, financial inequalities, and inclusive growth in African countries. We introduce a novel way of examining inclusive growth in African countries by developing a unified measure of inclusive growth that captures the two dimensions of inclusive growth: income growth and income distribution. This enables us to adequately assess not just increased opportunities arising from economic growth, but also see how those new opportunities are distributed across all segments of the population. We captured the fragile status of African countries by using an index of fragility. We measured financial inequalities using new data on financial inclusion. The data analysis suggested negative relationships between fragility and inclusive growth in African countries. In addition, the results suggest positive relationships between financial inclusion and inclusive growth. Thus, inclusive growth can be fostered through policies that reduce financial inequalities. Therefore, a less fragile environment is conducive to inclusive growth both directly and indirectly through financial inclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Growth in fragile states in Africa: Conflict and post‐conflict capital accumulation.
- Author
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Nkurunziza, Janvier D.
- Subjects
SAVINGS ,WAR ,POLITICAL stability ,ECONOMIC development ,CAPITAL gains - Abstract
This article analyses the pattern of capital accumulation in Africa and its interaction with political fragility. Political fragility, defined as armed conflict or civil war, retards or reverses gains with respect to capital accumulation, slowing long‐term economic growth. Many countries experience negative rates of capital accumulation, particularly during periods of acute political instability. In post‐war periods, countries generally continue to experience capital destruction, lending support to the "war ruin hypothesis." This has implications for long‐term economic growth in view of the strong association between capital accumulation and economic performance. The main policy implication of the analysis is that African countries and their international partners should pay more attention to capital accumulation, including capital reconstruction after periods of political instability, to lay the foundations for sustainable economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Financial Development, Foreign Banks and Economic Growth in Africa.
- Author
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El Menyari, Younesse
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN banking industry , *ECONOMIC development , *MARKET prices , *ECONOMIC policy , *DEVELOPMENT banks - Abstract
This study aims to examine and analyze the impact of financial development and foreign bank penetration on African economies. An empirical study for the period 1995–2015 is conducted using the system GMM estimator. Our empirical results indicate that foreign bank entry has a positive and significant impact on economic growth in the countries of North and Southern Africa, while in the other two regions considered in this study (West and Central Africa, East Africa) the impact is negative and rarely significant. In addition, our results show that the development of financial markets has a positive and significant effect on economic growth only in the Southern African region. The paper concludes that policymakers should focus on long‐term policies to strengthen the financial sector to truly meet the needs of African people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Factors influencing the growth of SMEs: The case of Ghana.
- Author
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Thompson Agyapong, Guy, Mmieh, Frederick, and Mordi, Chima
- Subjects
GROWTH of small business ,SMALL business ,EMERGING markets ,ECONOMIC development ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
This study examines the factors that affect the growth of small and medium‐sized enterprises (SMEs) in the context of Ghana, using entrepreneurs (or owner/managers) of SMEs as the unit of analysis. The data draws on in‐depth fieldwork undertaken for a period of three months involving 75 owner‐managers that were drawn from the three main sectors of the economy: agriculture, manufacturing, and services. Thematic technique was employed to analyze audiotaped interview transcripts. Findings show that several factors, including level of education, poor energy supply, access to external finance, competition, inflation and government policies influence the growth of SMEs in Ghana. The study recommends that sustained energy supply, review of lending and borrowing regulations, favorable fiscal policies, measures to combat unhealthy competition, provision of adequate training centers to equip entrepreneurs, and regulation on land acquisition should be government's priority to ensure consistent growth of SMEs in Ghana. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The economic growth and foreign direct investment nexus: Does democracy matter? Evidence from African countries.
- Author
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Awad, Atif and Ragab, Hoda
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,ECONOMIC development ,FOREIGN investments ,POLITICAL rights - Abstract
This article investigates the impact of democracy on the foreign direct investment (FDI)–economic growth nexus by considering both a country's current and past political regimes. We apply a linear dynamic panel data model to data from 53 African countries over the period 1989–2014. Standard errors of the estimates are Weidmeijer corrected, following an orthogonal deviations transformation. The results show that the direct impact of FDI on growth is positive and significant. Likewise, the stock of democracy plays a positive and significant role in the growth process. However, the positive impact of FDI on growth decreases with the improvement in the historical experience of a country with democracy. These findings imply that with contemporary efforts to expand political rights in Africa, it is critical to identify alternative channels that facilitate the transmission of the flow of FDI into further and sustainable growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Intra‐metropolitan corridor development in the City of Johannesburg and the Social Welfare.
- Author
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Kgantsi, Eugene Modisa, Geyer, Hermanus Stephanus, and Geyer, Jr, Hermanus Stephanus
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Science Policy & Practice is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Why has export diversification been so hard to achieve in Africa?
- Author
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Mosley, Paul
- Subjects
DIVERSIFICATION in industry ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMERCIAL policy ,LOW-income countries ,SUBSIDIES - Abstract
Abstract: This paper addresses two research issues to which Chris Milner has contributed: the role of trade policy in economic development, and the particular development case of Mauritius. On the first issue, the focus is on understanding why so few low‐income countries, especially in Africa, have achieved a sustained level of export diversification. The paper argues that the standard “Washington Consensus” advice on trade policy placed too much emphasis on liberalisation alone and neglected the important role of government policy, in particular the potential to use targeted input subsidies to support the development of export sectors. Mauritius is then discussed as an example of relatively successful subsidy policies that enabled diversification of exports: indeed the only African country to achieve this in a sustained manner. Subsidies are not advocated as a panacea, and it is recognised that they are not always feasible or effective, but they can be part of an export diversification strategy that supports economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Why institutional environments for agroforestry seed systems matter.
- Author
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Lillesø, J. P. B., Harwood, C., Derero, Abayneh, Graudal, L., Roshetko, J. M., Kindt, R., Moestrup, S., Omondi, W. O., Holtne, N., Mbora, A., van Breugel, P., Dawson, I. K., Jamnadass, R., and Egelyng, H.
- Subjects
AGROFORESTRY ,INSTITUTIONAL environment ,ECONOMIC development ,SEEDS ,GREEN Revolution - Abstract
Abstract: Rethinking the logic of institutional environments aiming to facilitate agroforestry smallholders in economic development, this article compares smallholder input supply systems for crop and tree seeds in sub‐Saharan Africa and reflects on two basic challenges: (1) how to develop a large number of relevant tree crops for different agroecologies, (2) how to reach smallholders in rural areas. Policy options for improving agroforestry input supply systems are discussed, whereby our article concludes with suggestions how sectoral approaches for crop seed systems can be modified to agroforestry seed‐seedling systems. Biophysical differences have practical implications for how the logic of the ‘African green revolution’ would be translated into a corresponding revolution for agroforestry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Role of Property Rights in the Relationship between Capital Flows and Economic Growth in SSA: Do Natural Resources Endowment and Country Income Level Matter? .
- Author
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Coulibaly, Sionfou Seydou, Gakpa, Lewis Landry, and Soumaré, Issouf
- Subjects
- *
PROPERTY rights , *CAPITAL movements , *FOREIGN investments , *ECONOMIC development , *NATURAL resources , *ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa - Abstract
Abstract: This paper studies the role played by the quality of property rights in the linkages of international capital flows into sub‐Saharan African (SSA) economies. Using panel data of 36 SSA countries over the period 1996–2015 and the ARDL procedure with the Pooled Mean Group regression method appropriate for non‐stationary panel data estimation, we account for the joint effects of property rights quality and openness to foreign capital flows on economic growth. We uncover the existence of a property rights quality threshold beyond which property rights either amplifies the spillovers effects or attenuates the negative effect of capital flows on economic growth. For instance, it takes a level of property rights of at least 60 to have a positive long‐term impact of capital flows on economic growth in natural resource‐poor African countries. The quality of property rights matters more to obtain spillover effects of capital flows on growth in natural resource‐poor countries than in their peer natural resource‐rich countries. Finally, with regard to the countries' income levels, capital flows have significant long‐term spillovers effects on economic growth in advanced African economies than in their low‐income peers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The growth effects of stabilisation funds and fiscal rules in oil‐rich African economies: empirical evidence and development policy implications from a Nigerian case study.
- Author
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Ibironke, Adesola
- Subjects
- *
STABILIZATION funds , *ECONOMIC development , *FISCAL policy , *ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa - Abstract
Abstract: This paper empirically examines the growth effects of stabilisation funds and fiscal rules in oil‐rich African countries, using Nigeria as a case study. The analysis captures the ‘international standard’ of the two fiscal instruments by empirically comparing the effects of Nigerian instruments with those of non‐African oil‐exporting countries (i.e. Norway and Mexico). The results show that the fiscal instruments are effective in Nigeria and that the effectiveness is comparable to that of non‐African economies, implying that the Nigerian instruments meet ‘international standard’. The paper also discusses the development policy implications of the results, one of which is that the fiscal instruments can be used to control risky behaviours of economic agents in oil‐rich African economies. For example, since the instruments are effective in increasing growth (i.e. real GDP growth) and limiting its volatility, they can be employed to control increases in demand for and supply of risky sex caused by increases in real per capita income during oil booms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Financial Development, Growth Volatility and Information Asymmetry in Sub-Saharan Africa: Does Law Matter?
- Author
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Ibrahim, Muazu and Alagidede, Paul
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,FOREIGN investments - Abstract
We re-examine the law-finance theory relying on 33 countries in sub-Saharan Africa over the period 2004-2011. Our evidence suggests that legal origin significantly explains cross-country differences in financial development and economic volatility. More importantly, relative to civil law, English common law countries and those in Southern Africa have higher financial sector development both in terms of financial activity and banking efficiency on the back of lower volatility. While private credit bureau positively (negatively) affects financial development (economic volatility) with economically large impact for English legal legacy countries, the latter effect is contingent on the form of legal origin suggesting that, the establishment of information sharing offices per se may be insufficient in taming growth vagaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Full Issue.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in Africa ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,PRICE inflation ,METEOROLOGY ,ECONOMIC trends ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Determinants of China's and Japan's Foreign Aid Allocations in Africa.
- Author
-
Furuoka, Fumitaka
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,ECONOMIC development ,SELF-interest ,FIXED effects model ,ASSET allocation - Abstract
Foreign aid plays an important role in promoting economic development in Africa. Recently, several countries, most notably China, have emerged as alternative sources of foreign aid. However, their motives for providing foreign aid have been questioned. The present study examines and compares determinants of China's and Japan's foreign aid allocations in Africa. It assumes that the distribution of foreign aid was determined by the aid donors' self-interest and also by the aid recipients' needs. Three panel model methods, namely, the pooled OLS method, the one-way fixed effects method and the two-way fixed effects methods, were employed to examine and compare the patterns of China's and Japan's foreign aid allocation in Africa. The main finding was that the provision of foreign aid by China and Japan was primarily driven by the aid donors' self-interest. Additionally, the size of population in a recipient country was an important element to determine China's and Japan's aid allocations. The findings also suggest that Japan tended to pay more attention to the aid recipient countries' needs as well as to the quality of governance and institutions in these countries. Overall, the findings indicate that there was no considerable difference in the motives for the provision of aid between the two aid donor countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Threshold Effects of Debt on Economic Growth in Africa.
- Author
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Ndoricimpa, Arcade
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in Africa ,DEBT ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCE ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This study aims at examining the debt threshold effects on economic growth in Africa. Non-dynamic and dynamic panel threshold regression approaches are used. The findings indicate that the estimated debt threshold is sensitive to the estimation technique used and to growth control variables included in the estimation. Existence of nonlinearities in the debt-growth nexus cannot be denied. The findings show that while low debt is neutral or growth-enhancing, high debt is consistently detrimental to growth for all the cases considered. This study shows that caution is needed when suggesting a debt threshold since this can be sensitive to modelling choice and to growth control variables. Nonlinearities in the debt-growth nexus are established but further analysis is needed to suggest a policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. What Is and What May Never Be: Economic Voting in Developing Democracies.
- Author
-
Wimpy, Cameron and Whitten, Guy D.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC voting ,DEMOCRACY ,POLITICAL development ,ELECTIONS ,MASS media & politics ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Objective We propose and test a theory that media freedom determines the extent of economic voting in developing democracies. Methods Building on extant work that suggests economic voting takes place in developing democracies much like it does in established democracies (Lewis-Beck and Stegmaier, 2008), we test our theory using a new collection of aggregate data from elections in 22 developing democracies in Africa Results Media freedom rather than political freedom may be a bigger determinant of economic voting in developing democracies. Moreover, the threshold of political development needed for economic voting is lower than previously suggested by the literature. Conclusion Economic voting is alive and well in developing democracies-even those with relatively low levels of economic and political development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. UGANDA: Budget 2017-18.
- Subjects
UGANDAN economy ,ECONOMIC development ,BUDGET - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Ethnic Fractionalization, Governance and Loan Defaults in Africa.
- Author
-
Andrianova, Svetlana, Baltagi, Badi H., Demetriades, Panicos, and Fielding, David
- Subjects
LOANS ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa ,MARKET segmentation ,EMPIRICAL research ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
We present a theoretical model of an imperfectly competitive loans market that is suitable for emerging economies in Africa. The model allows for variation in both the level of contract enforcement (the quality of governance) and the degree of market segmentation (the level of ethnic fractionalization). The model predicts a specific form of nonlinearity in the effects of these variables on loan default. Empirical analysis using African panel data for 110 individual banks in 28 countries over 2000-08 provides strong evidence for these predictions. Our results have important implications for the conditions under which policy reform will enhance financial development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Networks in Conflict: Theory and Evidence From the Great War of Africa.
- Author
-
König, Michael D., Rohner, Dominic, Thoenig, Mathias, and Zilibotti, Fabrizio
- Subjects
WAR ,NASH equilibrium ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,ESTIMATION theory - Abstract
We study from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective how a network of military alliances and enmities affects the intensity of a conflict. The model combines elements from network theory and from the politico-economic theory of conflict. We obtain a closed-form characterization of the Nash equilibrium. Using the equilibrium conditions, we perform an empirical analysis using data on the Second Congo War, a conflict that involves many groups in a complex network of informal alliances and rivalries. The estimates of the fighting externalities are then used to infer the extent to which the conflict intensity can be reduced through (i) dismantling specific fighting groups involved in the conflict; (ii) weapon embargoes; (iii) interventions aimed at pacifying animosity among groups. Finally, with the aid of a random utility model, we study how policy shocks can induce a reshaping of the network structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Effects of Trade and Trade Facilitation on Economic Growth in Africa.
- Author
-
Sakyi, Daniel, Villaverde, José, Maza, Adolfo, and Bonuedi, Isaac
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,MULTIPLE correspondence analysis (Statistics) ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,ENDOGENEITY (Econometrics) ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This study investigates the effects of trade and trade facilitation on economic growth in Africa. To do so, we measure trade facilitation by means of three indicators, namely trade, export and import related costs, constructed by using principal component analysis. These indicators, in addition to several policy-relevant variables, are used as exogenous variables to estimate an augmented growth model which, with the aid of a dynamic system GMM estimation technique, properly addresses potential endogeneity concerns. The findings suggest that trade facilitation serves as an important channel through which trade affects economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Size Matters: The Effect of the Size of Ethnic Groups on Development.
- Author
-
Dimico, Arcangelo
- Subjects
ETHNIC groups ,AFRICANS ,CIVIL war ,REPRESENTATIVE government ,ECONOMIC development ,POLITICAL participation - Abstract
The share of ethnic groups is one of the most important features of African politics. It affects civil wars, representation in government positions, distributive and allocative policies. In this paper, we use the partition of ethnic groups as a natural experiment in order to estimate the effect of the share of these ethnic groups on development. We show that larger groups have an advantage in terms of development and that the partition in itself does not matter for development. This result is explained by the fact that the partition matters only when the resulting groups are relatively small, since their lack of political representation may weaken support for institutions, may bias policies and the provision of ethnic/regional public goods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Institutional Environment and Microfinance Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
-
Chikalipah, Sydney
- Subjects
- *
MICROFINANCE , *SMALL business finance , *ECONOMIC development , *GENERALIZED method of moments ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa, 1960- ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa - Abstract
This paper explores the impact of the institutional environment on the performance of 291 microfinance institutions in 34 sub-Saharan Africa countries during the period 2006 to 2014, by analysing the unbalanced panel data using fixed effects and generalized method of moments (GMM) estimation techniques. The panel regression results demonstrate strong evidence that a strong institutional environment has a positive effect on the performance of microfinance institutions in sub-Saharan Africa. More specifically, the findings reveal a positive and significant relationship between business freedom and microfinance performance in sub-Saharan Africa. These vital findings not only provide useful information to policy makers and key microfinance industry players, but also highlight the impact that institutional qualities have on microfinance performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Foreign Direct Investment, Democracy and Economic Growth in Southern Africa.
- Author
-
Malikane, Christopher and Chitambara, Prosper
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN investments , *DEMOCRACY , *ECONOMIC development , *INSTITUTIONAL investments , *LAW , *ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This paper investigates the link between foreign direct investment (FDI), democracy and economic growth on a panel of eight Southern African countries for 1980-2014 using the system generalized method-of-moment (GMM) estimator. We find that FDI has a direct positive effect on economic growth and that strong democratic institutions are a significant driver of economic growth in the sample countries. The impact of FDI on economic growth is dependent on the level of democracy in the host countries. This implies that countries with strong democratic institutions are better able to absorb the positive spillovers from FDI. In policy terms, Southern African countries should sustain the institutional reform policy agenda already in place in order to benefit more from the significant inflows of FDI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. AIMS, SCOPE AND AUTHOR GUIDELINES.
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *SOCIAL development , *MANUSCRIPTS , *TWENTY-first century ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa - Abstract
The article discusses the aims, scope and author guidelines of the magazine, which is devoted to the study and analysis of development policy in Africa. Topics include the articles related to the economic and social development in Africa, the instructions on the preparation and submission of manuscripts and the Exclusive License Form to be signed by the authors for accepted papers.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Urban Governance in Africa Today: Reframing, Experiences, and Lessons.
- Author
-
Obeng‐Odoom, Franklin
- Subjects
PUBLIC administration ,ECONOMIC development ,POVERTY reduction ,ECONOMIC policy ,LABOR - Abstract
Progress in analysing the instrumental view of governance as an engine for growth, poverty reduction, and inclusive development has been held back by the difficulty in framing governance. This essay seeks to address this problem by 1) reframing urban governance 2) evaluating its aims, processes, and outcomes, and 3) explaining those outcomes on the basis of which some lessons are teased out. Using examples from Africa and an institutional political economy approach (based on institutional economics, Marxist political economics, Georgist political economics, and Polanyian political economy), I show that, overall, while urban economies are growing; both urban poverty and inequality levels have risen substantially. Urban governance has paved the way for new forms of urban development that only benefit the few. Not only are there differences in how urban services and resources are experienced, accessed, and controlled but the varieties are also socially differentiated. I argue that the underlying reasons for this disjuncture between 'urban governance' in theory and 'actually existing urban governance' are 1) difficulties in implementing urban governance theory consistently in practice, 2) problems arising because urban governance theory has been implemented in practice, 3) tensions that would entangle most policies which do not address historical and structural economic issues, 4) restrictive assumptions, and 5) incoherence among the different dimensions of urban governance. To resolve these contradictions, I put the case for major structural and institutional change involving: 1) the re-ordering of the roles of the state, market, and society as institutions of change; 2) re-working the relationships that bind together land, labour, capital, and the state, and 3) re-organising the channels for keeping the attainment of the ends of urban governance in check. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Elasticity of Poverty with respect to Sectoral Growth in Africa.
- Author
-
Berardi, Nicoletta and Marzo, Federica
- Subjects
POVERTY ,ECONOMIC development ,GROSS domestic product ,MACROECONOMICS ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
The African continent has grown by more than 4 percent yearly on average during the past decade. However, the link between this remarkable growth rate and poverty reduction is neither obvious nor simple. This paper focuses on the elasticity of poverty with respect to GDP growth at the sectoral level and takes into account the fact that economic growth may affect poverty directly as well as indirectly through sectoral labor share intensity. It develops a methodology that sheds light on the contribution of sectoral growth to poverty reduction country-by-country in Africa, guiding policy recommendations. As the composition of growth matters at least as much as its overall intensity, it is key to identify the sectors that have the strongest impact on poverty reduction and unleash their potential; if growth happens to concentrate in sectors with scarce pro-poor potential, like commodity-driven growth, redistributive strategies are necessary to compensate the weak effect on poverty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Uneven Development and Scale Politics in Southern Africa: What We Learn from Neil Smith.
- Author
-
Bond, Patrick and Ruiters, Greg
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,URBANIZATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
Southern Africa is probably the most unevenly developed region on earth, combining the most modern technologies and an advanced working class with the world's extremes of inequality and social militancy. The two most extreme countries, both with settler-colonial populations and accumulation processes that created durable class/race/gender distortions and extreme environmental degradation, are South Africa and Zimbabwe-both of which Neil Smith visited in 1995. His contribution to our understanding of political economy, before and after, was exemplary. We consider in this article how Smith's theory assisted in the understanding of crisis-ridden financial markets within the framework of capital overaccumulation and intensified spatial unevenness; the politics of scale, difference and community; and the ways that class apartheid and durable racism in the two countries together fit within contemporary geopolitical economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Full Issue.
- Subjects
PUBLIC spending ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The article offers information related to Africa including the 2017 budget in Algeria, the 11th African Economic Conference (AEC) in Abuja, Nigeria on December 7, 2016, and the funding committed by the World Bank Group to support the economic development of Madagascar until 2020.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. AFRICA - IMF: Reports and Mission Visits.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC forecasting - Abstract
The article discusses banking and finance reports from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for Africa as of January 1, 2017 including the economic growth and diversification in Angola, the economic forecast for Cabo Verde, and the resilience and growth-related risks for Morocco.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Analysis of Gender Equality in Youth Employment in Africa.
- Author
-
Anyanwu, John C.
- Subjects
- *
GENDER inequality , *YOUTH employment , *EMPLOYMENT , *ECONOMIC development , *URBANIZATION ,UNITED States gross domestic product - Abstract
This paper empirically studies the key drivers of gender equality in youth employment over the period, 1991 and 2011. Using the pooled OLS method with year, sub-regional, and oil fixed-effects, our results suggest that for Africa as a whole and Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), quadratic levels of real per capita GDP, gender equality in primary education, trade openness, FDI inflows, political globalization, economic growth, urbanization, female population, and being a net oil-exporting country are significantly positively associated with gender equality in youth employment. The level of real GDP per capita, equality in secondary education, gross domestic investment, access to telephone, youth unemployment, and Muslim faith tend to lower it. Government consumption expenditure also lowers it in SSA. However, North Africa is different: the level of real GDP per capita, gender equality in secondary education, and government consumption expenditure tend to increase gender equality in youth employment, while being an oil-exporting country and youth unemployment tend to lower it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. History, Data and Economics for Africa: Can We Get Them Less Wrong?: Reply to Morten Jerven's 'Trapped between tragedies and miracles: Misunderstanding African economic growth'.
- Author
-
Cogneau, Denis
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The author comments on professor Morten Jerven's critique on mainstream economic analyses of the development in Africa. Topics discussed include his claim that Jerven failed to make sufficient emphasis on the quality of empirical arguments and Jerven's book "Poor Numbers" about the lack of quality of gross domestic product (GDP).
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Trapped between tragedies and miracles: Misunderstanding African economic growth.
- Author
-
Jerven, Morten
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC activity ,ECONOMICS & literature ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
The author comments on literature about the failure of economic growth in Africa. Topics discussed include his argument on the wrong emphasis of cross-sectional literature on income and growth and his suggestion in the book "Africa: Why Economists Get It Wrong," on the need for a change in emphasis on the study of economics at the macro level in Africa.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The trans-Atlantic slave trade and local political fragmentation in Africa.
- Author
-
Obikili, Nonso
- Subjects
SOCIAL institutions ,SLAVE trade ,VILLAGES ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL conditions in Africa ,ETHNIC groups ,HISTORY ,HISTORY of slave trades ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This article examines the possibility that the trans-Atlantic slave trade influenced the political institutions of villages and towns in precolonial Africa. Using anthropological data, it shows that villages and towns of ethnic groups with higher slave exports were more politically fragmented during the precolonial era. Instrumental variables are used to show that the relationship is causal. It is argued that this fragmentation is important for relative economic development because it still influences political institutions today. This argument is supported by the use of more contemporary data to show that in contemporary Nigeria and Tanzania, areas with higher levels of precolonial political fragmentation have a higher incidence of bribery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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