Mineral rents, conflict, population and economic growth in selected economies: empirical focus on Sub-Saharan Africa

T. Ajayi
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Abstract

PurposeThis study aims to investigate the effects of mineral rents, conflict and population growth on countries' growth, with a specific interest in 13 selected economies in Sub-Saharan Africa.Design/methodology/approachThis paper uses a combination of research methods: the pooled ordinary least squares (OLS), the fixed effect and the system generalized method of moment (GMM). The consistent estimator (system GMM), which provides the paper's empirical findings, remedies the inherent endogeneity bias in the model formulation. The utilized panel dataset for the study spans from 1980 to 2022.FindingsThe study suggests that mineral rents positively affect countries' growth by about 0.407 percentage points in the short run. The study further demonstrates the long-run negative impacts of population growth rates and prevalence of civil war on economic growth. The empirical work of the study reveals that an increase in the number of international borders within the group promotes mineral conflicts, which impedes economic growth. Evidence from the specification tests performed in the study confirmed the validity of the empirical results.Social implicationsMineral rents, if well managed and conditioned on good institutions, are a blessing to an economy, contrary to the assumptions that mineral resources are a curse. The utilization of mineral rents in Sub-Saharan Africa for economic growth depends on several factors, notably the level of mineral conflicts, population growth rates, institutional factors and the ability to contain civil war, among others.Originality/valueThis study is the first attempt in the post-coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) era to revisit the investigation of the impacts of mineral rents, conflict and population growth rates on the countries' growth while controlling for the potential implications of the qualities of institutions. One of the significant contributions of the study is the identification of high population growth rates as one of the primary drivers of mineral conflicts that impede economic growth in the states with enormous mineral deposits in Sub-Saharan Africa. The crucial inference drawn from the study is that mineral rents positively impact countries' growth, even with inherent institutional challenges, although the results could be better with good institutions.
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特定经济体的矿产租金、冲突、人口和经济增长:撒哈拉以南非洲的经验重点
本研究旨在调查矿产租金、冲突和人口增长对各国经济增长的影响,特别关注撒哈拉以南非洲 13 个选定经济体。本文综合使用了多种研究方法:集合普通最小二乘法(OLS)、固定效应法和系统广义矩法(GMM)。一致估计法(系统广义矩法)提供了本文的实证研究结果,弥补了模型表述中固有的内生性偏差。研究使用的面板数据集时间跨度为 1980 年至 2022 年。研究结果研究表明,矿产租金在短期内对国家经济增长产生了约 0.407 个百分点的积极影响。研究进一步表明,人口增长率和内战的发生率对经济增长有长期的负面影响。研究的实证工作显示,集团内国际边界数量的增加会促进矿产冲突,从而阻碍经济增长。研究中进行的规格检验的证据证实了实证结果的有效性。 社会影响与矿产资源是祸害的假设相反,如果管理得当并以良好的制度为条件,矿产租金是经济的福气。撒哈拉以南非洲如何利用矿产资源促进经济增长取决于多个因素,特别是矿产冲突程度、人口增长率、制度因素和遏制内战的能力等。 原创性/价值本研究是 2019 年后冠状病毒病(COVID-19)时代的首次尝试,旨在重新调查矿产资源租金、冲突和人口增长率对国家经济增长的影响,同时控制制度质量的潜在影响。该研究的重大贡献之一是确定了高人口增长率是矿产冲突的主要驱动因素之一,而矿产冲突阻碍了撒哈拉以南非洲拥有大量矿藏的国家的经济增长。研究得出的重要推论是,矿产租金对国家增长产生积极影响,即使存在固有的体制挑战,但如果有良好的体制,结果可能会更好。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
10 weeks
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