Globalisation and economic growth in Africa: New evidence from the past two decades

IF 1.2 4区 管理学 Q3 ECONOMICS
P. B. Beri, Gabriel Mhonyera, G. Nubong
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background: In the last two decades, the world experienced two overlapping global shocks – that is, the 2008–2009 financial crisis and the COVID-19 lockdowns – with severe social and economic consequences on African economies that have, once again, brought to the fore the intricate role that globalisation plays in economic growth because of grave risks that often accompany it.Aim: We consider three research questions about globalisation: (i) does globalisation heighten economic growth? (ii) is there a statistically significant threshold level of globalisation above which globalisation affects growth differently than at lower levels? (iii) what factors moderate the globalisation-economic growth nexus?Setting: A panel of 47 selected countries from Africa from 2001 to 2018 is under scrutiny.Method: To begin, it applies an overlapping five-year moving average (MA) to smoothen the data. In addition, we employ the revised globalisation index and the two-step systems generalised method of the moment (GMM) in its empirical strategy.Results: We find a largely insignificant relationship between globalisation and economic growth. We attribute these results to Africa’s infinitesimal share – less than 5% – in foreign direct investment (FDI) and global trade, acute infrastructure deficit and the lack of relevant skills that lead to productivity losses and weak performance within the international business ecosystem. We also find, among others, that globalisation is more effective in countries with more gross capital formation, higher population and urban growth rates.Conclusion: For Africa to maximise its growth potential from globalisation, sound policies should be put in place to promote trade, FDI, domestic capital formation and urbanisation. We suggest that future studies investigate the long-run equilibrium relationship between globalisation and economic growth.
全球化与非洲经济增长:过去二十年的新证据
背景:在过去二十年中,世界经历了两次重叠的全球冲击,即2008-2009年金融危机和COVID-19封锁,给非洲经济带来了严重的社会和经济后果,这再次凸显了全球化在经济增长中发挥的复杂作用,因为全球化往往伴随着严重风险。目的:我们考虑三个关于全球化的研究问题:(i)全球化是否促进经济增长?(ii)全球化是否有一个统计上显著的阈值,超过这个阈值,全球化对经济增长的影响与低于这个阈值时不同?(三)哪些因素缓和了全球化与经济增长的关系?背景:从2001年到2018年,一个由47个选定的非洲国家组成的小组正在接受审查。方法:首先,它应用重叠的五年移动平均线(MA)来平滑数据。此外,我们在实证策略中采用了修正的全球化指数和两步系统广义矩法(GMM)。结果:我们发现全球化与经济增长之间的关系基本上不显著。我们将这些结果归因于非洲在外国直接投资(FDI)和全球贸易中所占份额极小(不到5%),严重的基础设施赤字以及缺乏相关技能,导致生产力损失和国际商业生态系统中的表现不佳。我们还发现,除其他外,全球化在资本形成总额更高、人口和城市增长率更高的国家更为有效。结论:为了使非洲从全球化中最大限度地发挥其增长潜力,应该制定健全的政策来促进贸易、外国直接投资、国内资本形成和城市化。我们建议未来的研究应着眼于全球化与经济增长之间的长期均衡关系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
9.10%
发文量
29
审稿时长
52 weeks
期刊介绍: The South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences (SAJEMS) is a leading South African-based publication for interdisciplinary research in the economic and management sciences. The journal publishes and disseminates high-quality academic articles that contribute to the better understanding of the interaction between economic, environmental and social perspectives as applicable to the broader management sciences in an African environment. The editorial board therefore invites authors to submit their research from areas such as economics, finance, accounting, human capital, marketing and other related disciplines that break down common intellectual silos and prepares a new path for debate on the operation and development of sustainable markets and organisations as relevant to the broader African context.
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