3.8 Article

Foreign aid-Economic Growth Nexus in Africa: Does Financial Development Matter?

Journal

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC JOURNAL
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages 418-444

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10168737.2022.2083653

Keywords

Foreign aid; financial development; economic growth; Africa

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education of Humanities and Social Science Grant of China [17YJC790127]

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This study explores the relationship between financial development, foreign aid, and economic growth. The findings indicate that financial development spurs economic growth, while foreign aid impedes growth in Africa. Moreover, the study reveals that financial development conditions the impact of foreign aid on economic growth. Additionally, country-specific analysis shows that the effectiveness of aid varies depending on the strength of the financial system.
This study explored the role of financial development in foreign aid (measured by agriculture, humanitarian, health, economic infrastructure and services, and education aid) and economic growth relationship for 37 African countries spanning the 2002-2018 period. Using the instrumental variable generalized method of moments model, our findings indicated that while foreign aid impedes Africa's growth, financial development spurs economic growth. The conditional effect analysis showed that financial development conditions foreign aid to spur economic growth. The country-specific analysis further showed that foreign aid has a higher growth elasticity in countries with relatively better financial systems, such as Mauritius, South Africa, Gabon, Tunisia, and Botswana, whilst the growth elasticity of aid is smaller in countries with a relatively weak financial system such as Malawi, Guinea Bissau, Sierra Leone, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The study recommended the need for policymakers in Africa to implement innovative ways to improve domestic revenue mobilization. The study also recommended that policymakers in Africa should create an enabling environment that will enhance the development of Africa's financial system to mitigate the adverse effect of aid on economic growth.

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