Who Finances Whom?

J. Kiss
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Abstract

In contrast to the highly developed countries and some developing regions, Africa highly depends on external resources of financing development. According to the saving-investment gap concept, there is a significant gap between savings and investment rates. As domestic resources are limited and their mobilization is slow, the region should rely on external sources of finance (i.e., aid, export revenues, FDI, loans, and remittances) in order to close the finance gap. Despite the massive inflow of external resources, the 200 billion USD yearly financing gap still prevails. The outflow of financial resources from Africa in the form of profit repatriations, debt service, tax dodging, capital flight and illicit financial flow exceeds the inflow, suggesting that Africa is a bottomless barrel. The long-standing concept about the saving-investment gap does not provide a full explanation for the prevailing financing gap. The main research questions are as follows: (a) Why is there a permanent financing gap in Africa? b) Why does the outflow of financial resources exceed the inflow? c) What should be done to close the financing gap and solve the problem of financing development? The paper is structured as follows: Section 1 is based on the saving-investmentgap concept and explores the validity of this theory in Sub-Saharan Africa. The conclusion of Section 1 is that there is a permanent finance gap in SSA, consequently, the region should rely on external sources of finance. Section 2 introduces the main external sources of finance (aid, FDI and remittances) and reveals the major trends and characteristics of these flows. As the saving-investment gap is smaller than the amount of external financial inflow, two questions arise: Where does the money go? Is Africa suffering from a financial haemorrhage? Section 3 tries to identify those “leaks” which drain Africa’s accumulated domestic and external resources by analysing the main channels of financial outflows such as capital flight and illicit financial flows. In the conclusion we present the financing situation of Africa and answer the question “Who finances whom?” and make recommendations for enhancing development finance. The final conclusion is that not the external world finances Africa, but Africa finances the world. The issue of financing Africa’s development cannot be solved without (a) mobilizing domestic resources (including domestic savings), (b) attracting external resources as well as improving the use and avoiding the misuse of inflowing financial resources, and (c) curbing capital flight and tackling illicit financial outflow.
谁资助谁?
与高度发达的国家和一些发展中区域不同,非洲高度依赖外部资源来资助发展。根据储蓄-投资差距概念,储蓄率和投资率之间存在显著差距。由于国内资源有限,筹集缓慢,该区域应依靠外部资金来源(即援助、出口收入、外国直接投资、贷款和汇款),以弥补资金缺口。尽管外部资源大量流入,但每年2000亿美元的资金缺口仍然存在。以利润汇回、还本付息、逃税、资本外逃和非法资金流动的形式从非洲流出的财政资源超过了流入的资金,这表明非洲是一个无底洞。长期以来关于储蓄-投资缺口的概念并没有为普遍存在的融资缺口提供充分的解释。主要的研究问题如下:(a)为什么非洲存在长期的资金缺口?b)为什么金融资源流出超过流入?c)如何缩小融资缺口,解决发展融资问题?本文的结构如下:第1节基于储蓄-投资缺口概念,并探讨了该理论在撒哈拉以南非洲的有效性。第1节的结论是,SSA存在永久性的资金缺口,因此,该地区应依靠外部资金来源。第2节介绍了主要的外部资金来源(援助、外国直接投资和汇款),并揭示了这些资金流动的主要趋势和特点。由于储蓄与投资之间的差额小于外部资金流入的数额,就产生了两个问题:资金去了哪里?非洲正在遭受财政大出血吗?第3节通过分析诸如资本外逃和非法资金流动等资金外流的主要渠道,试图查明消耗非洲积累的国内和外部资源的那些“漏洞”。在结论中,我们介绍了非洲的筹资情况,并回答了“谁资助谁?”,并就加强发展融资提出建议。最后的结论是,不是外部世界资助非洲,而是非洲资助世界。如果不:(a)调动国内资源(包括国内储蓄),(b)吸引外部资源以及改进对流入的财政资源的使用和避免滥用,(c)遏制资本外逃和处理非法资金外流,就无法解决为非洲发展筹措资金的问题。
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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