Aid on Demand: African Leaders and the Geography of China's Foreign Assistance

A. Dreher, A. Fuchs, R. Hodler, Bradley C. Parks, P. Raschky, M. Tierney
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引用次数: 275

Abstract

This article investigates whether China's foreign aid is particularly prone to political capture by political leaders of aid-receiving countries. Specifically, we examine whether more Chinese aid is allocated to the political leaders' birth regions and regions populated by the ethnic group to which the leader belongs, controlling for indicators of need and various fixed effects. We have collected data on 117 African leaders' birthplaces and ethnic groups and geocoded 1,650 Chinese development finance projects across 3,097 physical locations committed to Africa over the 2000-2012 period. Our econometric results show that current political leaders' birth regions receive substantially larger financial flows from China than other regions. On the contrary, when we replicate the analysis for the World Bank, our regressions with region-fixed effects show no evidence of such favoritism. For Chinese and World Bank aid alike, we also find no evidence that African leaders direct more aid to areas populated by groups who share their ethnicity, when controlling for region-fixed effects.
随需应变的援助:非洲领导人与中国对外援助的地理
本文考察了中国的对外援助是否特别容易被受援国的政治领导人政治俘获。具体而言,在控制需求指标和各种固定效应的情况下,我们考察了中国援助是否更多地分配给了政治领导人的出生地区和领导人所属民族居住的地区。我们收集了117位非洲领导人的出生地和族裔群体的数据,并对2000年至2012年期间中国在3097个实际地点向非洲提供的1650个发展融资项目进行了地理编码。我们的计量结果表明,当前政治领导人的出生地区从中国获得的资金流比其他地区要大得多。相反,当我们为世界银行重复分析时,我们的区域固定效应回归没有显示出这种偏袒的证据。同样,对于中国和世界银行的援助,我们也没有发现证据表明,在控制地区固定效应的情况下,非洲领导人将更多的援助直接投向了拥有相同种族的群体居住的地区。
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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