To read this content please select one of the options below:

Innovation, institutions and economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa – an IV estimation of a panel threshold model

Joseph Ato Forson (Department of Banking and Finance, School of Business, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Rosemary Afrakomah Opoku (Department of Educational Administration and Management, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Michael Owusu Appiah (Department of Finance, School of Business, College of Humanities and Legal Studies, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana)
Evans Kyeremeh (Department of Marketing, Procurement and Supply Chain Management, School of Business, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Ibrahim Anyass Ahmed (Department of Accounting, School of Business, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Ronald Addo-Quaye (School of Information Systems, Science and Engineering Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Zhen Peng (Department of Accounting, School of Management, Guangdong University of Technology, Guangzhou, China)
Ernest Yeboah Acheampong (Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Sport (HPERS), Faculty of Health Education, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Bernard Bekuni Boawei Bingab (Department of Management Sciences, School of Business, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Emmanuel Bosomtwe (Department of Banking and Finance, School of Business, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana)
Akorkor Kehinde Awoonor (School of International Relations, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China)

Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences

ISSN: 1026-4116

Article publication date: 19 September 2020

Issue publication date: 6 August 2021

484

Abstract

Purpose

The significant impact of innovation in stimulating economic growth cannot be overemphasized, more importantly from policy perspective. For this reason, the relationship between innovation and economic growth in developing economies such as the ones in Africa has remained topical. Yet, innovation as a concept is multi-dimensional and cannot be measured by just one single variable. With hindsight of the traditional measures of innovation in literature, we augment it with the number of scientific journals published in the region to enrich this discourse.

Design/methodology/approach

We focus on an approach that explores innovation policy qualitatively from various policy documents of selected countries in the region from three policy perspectives (i.e. institutional framework, financing and diffusion and interaction). We further investigate whether innovation as perceived differently is important for economic growth in 25 economies in sub-Saharan Africa over the period 1990–2016. Instrumental variable estimation of a threshold regression is used to capture the contributions of innovation as a multi-dimensional concept on economic growth, while dealing with endogeneity between the regressors and error term.

Findings

The results from both traditional panel regressions and IV panel threshold regressions show a positive relationship between innovation and economic growth, although the impact seems negligible. Institutional quality dampens innovation among low-regime economies, and the relation is persistent regardless of when the focus is on aggregate or decomposed institutional factors. The impact of innovation on economic growth in most regressions is robust to different dimensions of innovation. Yet, the coefficients of the innovation variables in the two regimes are quite dissimilar. While most countries in the region have offered financial support in the form of budgetary allocations to strengthen institutions, barriers to the design and implementation of innovation policies may be responsible for the sluggish contribution of innovation to the growth pattern of the region.

Originality/value

Segregating economies of Africa into two distinct regimes based on a threshold of investment in education as a share of GDP in order to understand the relationship between innovation and economic growth is quite novel. This lends credence to the fact that innovation as a multifaceted concept does not take place by chance – it is carefully planned. We have enriched the discourse of innovation and thus helped in deepening understanding on this contentious subject.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

A preliminary version of this paper was presented by the corresponding author at the 2020 virtual Global Development Finance conference in Cape Town, South Africa on “Innovative Development Finance Research and Practices - Expectations and Challenges Ahead” organized by the University of Cape Town in partnerships with the Chartered Institute of Development Finance and Development Finance practitioners. The authors are grateful to the panel session for the comments and critiques. The authors further extend a hand of appreciation to Prof. Ghulam Arain and Dr. Rebecca Abraham (the editors) and the numerous anonymous reviewers for the rigor in the review process. We appreciate every bit of their comments. Any remaining errors are that of the authors’.

Citation

Forson, J.A., Opoku, R.A., Appiah, M.O., Kyeremeh, E., Ahmed, I.A., Addo-Quaye, R., Peng, Z., Acheampong, E.Y., Bingab, B.B.B., Bosomtwe, E. and Awoonor, A.K. (2021), "Innovation, institutions and economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa – an IV estimation of a panel threshold model", Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences, Vol. 37 No. 3, pp. 291-318. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEAS-11-2019-0127

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles