Domestic Resources, Governance, Global Links, and the Economic Performance of Sub-Saharan Africa

V. Amavilah
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

This paper uses a simple production function to show that the economic performance of a group of African countries in 2007 depended on three broad sources: domestic resources, governance, and global links. The results reveal that investment plays the most important part. The effects of education (knowledge) as a component of human capital is modest, while the health (life expectancy) part of human capital is negative. At the aggregate level external relations, measured as openness, are positively correlated with per capita income. However, disaggregated as integration, aid dependency, and net tourism, all three global links have a negative effect on performance. Also, two indicators of institutional quality (governance) show that average improvement in the quality of institutions has helped economic performance. Considering different dimensions of institutions, the rule of law, and safety and security of property rights are the most constraining aspects of institutions in this group of countries. The findings leave enough room technical for fine-tuning and sophisticated estimators, which cautions interpretation. However, it seems clear that developing countries do better improving domestic resources and institutions than relying for performance on external relations, even though such links cannot be dismissed lightly.
国内资源、治理、全球联系和撒哈拉以南非洲的经济表现
本文使用一个简单的生产函数来表明,2007年一组非洲国家的经济表现取决于三个广泛的来源:国内资源、治理和全球联系。结果表明,投资是最重要的因素。教育(知识)作为人力资本组成部分的影响不大,而人力资本的健康(预期寿命)部分则是负面的。在总体水平上,对外关系(以开放程度衡量)与人均收入呈正相关。然而,按一体化、援助依赖和净旅游分类,这三种全球联系对绩效都有负面影响。此外,制度质量(治理)的两个指标表明,制度质量的平均改善有助于经济表现。考虑到制度的不同维度,法治和财产权的安全和保障是这组国家制度中最具限制性的方面。这些发现为微调和复杂的估计者留下了足够的技术空间,这对解释是谨慎的。然而,似乎很清楚的是,发展中国家改善国内资源和机构比依靠对外关系取得业绩做得更好,尽管这种联系不能轻易忽视。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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