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1 – 10 of over 33000Bill B. Francis, Iftekhar Hasan and Eric Ofori
This paper investigates the impact of the development of capital markets on economic growth in Africa and reports a significant increase in real GDP per capita after stock…
Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of the development of capital markets on economic growth in Africa and reports a significant increase in real GDP per capita after stock exchanges are established. This paper also reveals that there are significant improvements in the level of private investments in the post stock market launch era. The results also indicate that stock markets play a complementary role to the banking sector by contributing to the availability of private credit. Although African capital markets are relatively less advanced when compared to capital markets on other continents (particularly in terms of technology, structure, and liquidity), we find that their establishment has been crucial in helping African countries catch up with the rest of the world.
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Derrick Anquanah Cudjoe, He Yumei and Hanhui Hu
This study examines the impact of China’s trade, aid and foreign direct investment (FDI) on the economic growth of Africa.
Abstract
Purpose
This study examines the impact of China’s trade, aid and foreign direct investment (FDI) on the economic growth of Africa.
Design/methodology/approach
Our study covered 41 countries in Africa, cutting across the western, eastern, central, southern and northern sub-regions. The study adopted the dynamic system generalized method of moments (SGMM), feasible generalized least squares (FGLS) and Dumitrescu–Hurlin Panel Granger causality techniques for estimations.
Findings
Overall, FDI, trade and aid from China have a nonlinear relationship with Africa’s economic growth. The findings reveal a key novelty in that the marginal effect on real per capita GDP increases when China’s FDI interacts with the manufacturing sector in Africa. These findings are robust to long-run estimations.
Research limitations/implications
Given that we have examined the short-and long-run symbiotic effects of China’s FDI and Africa’s manufacturing sector and China’s aid and Africa’s manufacturing sector, more studies are warranted in this area, particularly to produce further empirical evidence of these findings. Moreover, future work could focus on investigating the country-specific effects of China’s trade, China’s FDI and China’s aid on real GDP per capita in each African country as our results reflect within-country elasticities.
Originality/value
This study provides new evidence on the impact of China’s trade, aid and FDI on the growth of African economies. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to empirically explore the long-run effects of China’s trade, FDI and aid on economic growth in African countries. This study also tests the claim of the displacement of Africa’s manufacturing industry by its Chinese counterparts.
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- Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
- contraception
- contraceptive prevalence rate
- demographic dividend
- demographic transitions theory
- hidden unemployment/disguised unemployment
- human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- internal migration
- international migration
- low-level equilibrium population trap/Malthusian population trap
- Malthusian perspective
- maternal and child health
- migration
- neo-Malthusian perspective
- population density
- population policies
- proximate determinants
- rural–urban migration
- seasonal migration
- sub-fecundity
- total fertility rate (TFR)
- unemployment rate
- urbanization
Godwin Ahiase, Maya Sari, Denny Andriana, Nugraha Nugraha, Budi Supriatono Purnomo and Toni Heryana
This study examines the moderating role of debt sustainability on the nexus between financial and economic growth in African countries.
Abstract
Purpose
This study examines the moderating role of debt sustainability on the nexus between financial and economic growth in African countries.
Design/methodology/approach
This study utilised data from various sources, such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund databases, specifically the World Development Indicators and Financial Access Survey. The data covered the period from 2004 to 2021 and focused on 53 African countries to examine the moderating effect of debt sustainability on the relationship between financial inclusion and economic growth using a two-step generalised method of moments system with forward orthogonal deviations.
Findings
The study findings indicate a direct link between financial inclusion and economic growth in African nations. In particular, the availability and utilisation of mobile money services are significant factors in promoting financial inclusion. Our study also highlights that excessive debt can impede economic growth by limiting the capacity of financial institutions to offer loans and other vital financial services.
Practical implications
Policymakers in Africa should promote economic growth by prioritising financial inclusion through mobile money and ATMs while ensuring sustainable debt levels.
Originality/value
This study adds to the ongoing discussion on the relationship between FI and economic growth in African countries. It explores how debt sustainability affects this relationship, and emphasises the importance of finding a balance between financial inclusion and debt management for long-term economic growth and development.
Peer review
The peer review history for this article is available at: https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/IJSE-01-2024-0062
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Don Gunasekera, Yiyong Cai and David Newth
The purpose of this paper is to review the key issues surrounding foreign direct investment (FDI) in agriculture, and examine the potential impacts of FDI in African agriculture…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to review the key issues surrounding foreign direct investment (FDI) in agriculture, and examine the potential impacts of FDI in African agriculture.
Design/methodology/approach
The dynamic Global Trade Analysis Project model (GDyn) is used to analyse the potential impacts of improvements in land productivity and FDI in Africa.
Findings
The results illustrate that combined efforts to improve land productivity and growth in FDI could potentially increase Africa’s share in global agricultural output and exports, particularly with respect to oil seeds, sugar, and cotton.
Originality/value
The authors employ a global economy-wide modelling framework to simulate the effects of growth in FDI in African agriculture.
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Ibrahim Ayoade Adekunle, Olukayode Maku, Tolulope Williams, Judith Gbagidi and Emmanuel O. Ajike
With heterogeneous findings dominating the growth and natural resources relations, there is a need to explain the variances in Africa's growth process as induced by robust…
Abstract
Purpose
With heterogeneous findings dominating the growth and natural resources relations, there is a need to explain the variances in Africa's growth process as induced by robust measures of factor endowments. This study used a comprehensive set of data from the updated database of the World Bank to capture the heterogeneous dimensions of natural resource endowments on growth with a particular focus on establishing complementary evidence on the resource curse hypothesis in energy and environmental economics literature in Africa. These comprehensive data on oil rent, coal rent and forest rent could provide new and insightful evidence on obscure relations on the subject matter.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper considers the panel vector error correction model (PVECM) procedure to explain changes in economic growth outcomes as induced by oil rent, coal rent and forest rent. The consideration of the PVECM was premised on the panel unit root process that returns series that were cointegrated at the first-order differentials.
Findings
The paper found positive relations between oil rent, coal rent and economic development in Africa. Forest rent, on the other hand, is inversely related to economic growth in Africa. Trade and human capital are positively related to economic growth in Africa, while population growth is negatively associated with economic growth in Africa.
Research limitations/implications
Short-run policies should be tailored towards the stability of fiscal expenditure such that the objective of fiscal policy, which is to maintain the condition of full employment and economic stability and stabilise the rate of growth, can be optimised and sustained. By this, the resource curse will be averted and productive capacity will increase, leading to sustainable growth and development in Africa, where conditions for growth and development remain inadequately met.
Originality/value
The originality of this paper can be viewed from the strength of its arguments and methods adopted to address the questions raised in this paper. This study further illuminated age-long obscure relations in the literature of natural resource endowment and economic growth by taking a disaggregated approach to the component-by-component analysis of natural resources factors (the oil rent, coal rent and forest rent) and their corresponding influence on economic growth in Africa. This pattern remains underexplored mainly in previous literature on the subject. Many African countries are blessed with an abundance of these different natural resources in varying proportions. The misuse and mismanagement of these resources along various dimensions have been the core of the inclination towards the resource curse hypothesis in Africa. Knowing how growth conditions respond to changes in the depth of forest resources, oil resources and coal resources could be useful pointers in Africa's overall energy use and management. This study contributed to the literature on natural resource-induced growth dynamics by offering a generalisable conclusion as to why natural resource-abundance economies are prone to poor economic performance. This study further asks if mineral deposits are a source or reflection of ill growth and underdevelopment in African countries.
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- Growth rates
- balanced growth
- colonial legacy
- culture
- democracy
- ethnic diversity
- export promotion
- externalities
- GDP
- gender gap
- Geography
- illiteracy rates
- import substitution
- indicators of development
- indicators of growth
- neoclassical tradition
- neo-Marxist paradigm
- orthodoxy
- per capita income
- political instability
- primary school enrolment