Post-Conflict Recovery: Institutions, Aid, or Luck?

Marshall Mills, Antonio C. David, Fabiano Rodrigues Bastos
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

This paper identifies the factors linked to cross-country differentials in growth performance in the aftermath of social conflict for 30 sub-Saharan African countries using panel data techniques. Our results show that changes in the terms of trade are the most important correlate of economic performance in post-conflict environments. This variable is typically associated with an increase in the marginal probability of positive economic performance by about 30 percent. Institutional quality emerges as the second most important factor. Foreign aid is shown to have very limited ability to explain differentials in growth performance, and other policy variables such as trade openness are not found to have a statistically significant effect. The results suggest that exogenous factors ("luck") are an important factor in post-conflict recovery. They also highlight the importance in post-conflict settings of policies to mitigate the macroeconomic impact of terms of trade volatility (including countercyclical macroeconomic policies and innovative financing instruments) and of policies to promote export diversification.
冲突后恢复:制度、援助还是运气?
本文利用面板数据技术确定了30个撒哈拉以南非洲国家在社会冲突后增长表现的跨国差异的相关因素。我们的研究结果表明,贸易条件的变化是冲突后环境中经济表现最重要的相关因素。这个变量通常与积极经济表现的边际概率增加约30%有关。制度质量成为第二个最重要的因素。研究显示,外援在解释增长表现差异方面的能力非常有限,而其他政策变量,如贸易开放程度,在统计上没有显著的影响。结果表明,外生因素(“运气”)是冲突后恢复的重要因素。报告还强调,在冲突后环境中,采取政策减轻贸易条件波动(包括反周期宏观经济政策和创新融资工具)对宏观经济的影响以及采取政策促进出口多样化的重要性。
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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