主权信用评级对撒哈拉以南非洲民主的影响

IF 2.7 4区 管理学 Q2 BUSINESS
Sean Gossel, Misheck Mutize
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的本研究调查:(1)民主化是否推动主权信用评级(SCR)的变化("民主优势"),或者主权信用评级的变化是否影响民主化;(2)撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)国家的民主化程度是否影响这些关联;(3)这些关联是否受到资源依赖性的显著影响。本研究调查了 2000-2020 年间 22 个撒哈拉以南非洲国家的 SCR 变化对民主的影响。在面板 VECM 框架下,进行了 VEC 格兰杰因果关系/块外生性 Wald 检验,以及脉冲响应和方差分解分析,并使用了 Cholesky 排序和蒙特卡罗标准误差。在子样本中,自然资源依赖程度并不影响上述 SCR 冲击对民主化的影响程度,但在民主程度相对较高的 SSA 国家,SCR 冲击会影响长期民主,但在民主程度较低的 SSA 国家,SCR 冲击更有可能推动民主深化。全样本方差分解进一步发现,SCR 对政治权利冲击的方差超过了所有宏观经济因素的影响,而在多元化程度较高的 SSA 国家,SCR 对民主和政治权利冲击的方差要大得多,这表明多元化 SSA 经济体的民主化和政治权利受到 SCR 变动的严重影响。在民主程度较高和较低的子样本中,民主程度相对较高的子样本的 SCR 方差大于民主程度较低的子样本。首先,SCR 变化的影响并非与民主无关,它对政治权利的影响大于对公民自由的影响。其次,国家信用评级的变化有可能在撒哈拉以南非洲国家引发负面循环,即评级下调导致社会政治稳定恶化,同时金融经济限制增加,反过来又推动评级进一步下调,造成宏观经济困难。最后,在民主程度较高的撒哈拉以南非洲国家,评级变化可能不利于民主,但在民主程度较低的撒哈拉以南非洲国家,评级变化则有利于民主。因此,政治上相对成熟的撒哈拉以南非洲国家更容易受到 SCR 变化的影响,而政治上不那么成熟的撒哈拉以南非洲国家则可以通过进行政治改革来积极塑造其 SCR。鉴于关于不公平评级行动和主观评级方法的争论仍在继续,这对非洲的学术工作至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of sovereign credit ratings on democracy in sub-Saharan Africa

Purpose

This study investigates (1) whether democratization drives sovereign credit ratings (SCR) changes (the “democratic advantage”) or whether SCR changes affect democratization, (2) whether the degree of democratization in sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries affects the associations and (3) whether the associations are significantly affected by resource dependence.

Design/methodology/approach

This study investigates the effects of SCR changes on democracy in 22 SSA countries over the period of 2000–2020 VEC Granger causality/block exogeneity Wald tests, and impulse responses and variance decomposition analyses with Cholesky ordering and Monte Carlo standard errors in a panel VECM framework.

Findings

The full sample impulse responses find that a SCR shock has a long-run detrimental effect on the democracy and political rights but only a short-run positive impact on civil liberties. Among the sub-samples, it is found that the extent of natural resource dependence does not affect the magnitude of SCR shocks on democratization mentioned above but it is found that a SCR shock affects long-run democracy in SSA countries that are relatively more democratic but is more likely to drive democratic deepening in less democratic SSA countries. The full sample variance decompositions further finds that the variance of SCR to a political rights shock outweighs the effects of all the macroeconomic factors, whereas in more diversified SSA countries, the variances of SCR are much greater for democracy and political rights shocks, which suggests that democratization and political rights in diversified SSA economies are severely affected by SCR changes. In the case of the high and low democracy sub-samples, it is found that the variance of SCR in the relatively higher democracy sub-sample is greater than in the low democracy sub-sample.

Social implications

These results have three implications for democratization in SSA. First, the effect of a SCR change is not a democratically agnostic and impacts political rights to a greater extent than civil liberties. Second, SCR changes have the potential to spark a negative cycle in SSA countries whereby a downgrade leads to a deterioration in socio-political stability coupled with increased financial economic constraints that in turn drive further downgrades and macroeconomic hardship. Finally, SCR changes are potentially detrimental for democracy in more democratic SSA countries but democratically supportive in less democratic SSA countries. Thus, SSA countries that are relatively politically sophisticated are more exposed to the effects of SCR changes, whereas less politically sophisticated SSA countries can proactively shape their SCRs by undertaking political reforms.

Originality/value

This study is the first to examine the associations between SCR and democracy in SSA. This is critical literature for the Africa’s scholarly work given that the debate on unfair rating actions and claims of subjective rating methods is ongoing.

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