More Growth or Fewer Collapses? A New Look at Long Run Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa
Keywords
SHARP REDUCTIONSTRUCTURAL POLICIES
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
COUNTRY LEVEL
AVERAGE GROWTH
RATE OF GROWTH
SOCIAL OUTCOMES
EXCHANGE RATE
UNDER 5 MORTALITY
THE GAMBIA
STRUCTURAL BREAK
DEVELOPING REGIONS
RULE OF LAW
NATURAL RESOURCES
CORRUPTION
CORRELATION ANALYSIS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
COUNTRY DATA
AVERAGE GROWTH RATE
INSTITUTIONAL VARIABLES
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
STAGNATION
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
RAPID GROWTH
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
INSTITUTIONAL PERFORMANCE
ACCOUNTABILITY
HEALTH OUTCOMES
REAL EFFECTIVE EXCHANGE RATE
POLICY RESEARCH
AVERAGE GROWTH RATES
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
PER CAPITA INCOME
EFFECTS OF VOLATILITY
DEPENDENT VARIABLE
ESTIMATED COEFFICIENTS
ECONOMIC REFORMS
DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH
PRIVATE SECTOR
CAPITA INCOME GROWTH
GOVERNANCE INDICATOR
PUBLIC POLICY
INCOME GROWTH
RICH COUNTRIES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
GROWTH RATE
CORRELATION COEFFICIENTS
AGGREGATE LEVEL
AVERAGE INCOME
OVERALL RATE OF GROWTH
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ACTUAL GROWTH
PER CAPITA GROWTH
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
SOCIAL VARIABLES
MEDIUM TERM GROWTH
OIL EXPORTERS
HIGHER VOLATILITY
REGULATORY QUALITY
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
POVERTY REDUCTION
INFANT MORTALITY
GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS
INCOME PER CAPITA
GROWTH SUCCESSES
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
HIGH INFLATION
GROWTH PATH
CORRELATION COEFFICIENT
GROWTH VOLATILITY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
LINK BETWEEN VOLATILITY
CONSUMER PRICE
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
POOR GOVERNANCE
CROSS COUNTRY EVIDENCE
GOVERNMENT CONSUMPTION
GROWTH PERFORMANCE
MEDIUM TERM
PURCHASING POWER
ECONOMIC CONTRACTIONS
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
CROSS COUNTRY
POLITICAL STABILITY
MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
GROWTH RATES
HIGH GROWTH
LONG RUN
POLICY MAKERS
GROWTH ACCELERATIONS
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW
ECONOMIC LITERATURE
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7533Abstract
Low and highly volatile growth define Africa's growth experience. But there is no evidence that growth volatility is associated to long term economic performance. This result may be misleading if it suggests that volatility is not important for economic and social progress. In this paper we use a variant of the method developed by Hausmann, Pritchett, and Rodrik (2005) to identify both growth acceleration and deceleration episodes in Africa between 1975 and 2005. The authors find that Africa has had numerous growth acceleration episodes in the last 30 years, but also nearly a comparable number of growth collapses, offsetting most of the benefits of growth. Had Africa avoided its growth collapses, it would have grown 1.7 percent a year instead of 0.7 percent, and its GDP per capita would have been more than 30 percent higher in 2005. The authors also find that growth accelerations and decelerations have an asymmetric impact on human development outcomes. Finally, our results suggest that it is easier to identify the likely institutional and policy origins of growth decelerations than of growth accelerations.Date
2012-06-08Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/7533http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7533
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Collections
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