Foreign direct investment and economic growth nexus in Africa
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Date
2019-07-23
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited
Abstract
Purpose – African countries are generally fragile. This and other related characteristics affect the potential for
growth and development. The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether the effect of FDI on economic
growth is contingent on a financial system that accounts for financial market fragility. An important point of
departure from earlier studies is the adoption of a new measure of financial market fragility.
Design/methodology/approach – Given the uniqueness of the data set, the study uses a panel data and
estimates an econometric model using an instrumental variable approach. For robustness purposes, a pooled
ordinary least square is also estimated.
Findings – The study provides evidence that if the financial market is fragile as in the case of Africa, FDI
inflows may have a marginally significant positive impact on economic growth. The findings suggest
that fragility in the financial market is a key absorptive capacity and cannot be trivialised when exploring
FDI–growth nexus in Africa.
Research limitations/implications – The uniqueness of the data set limited the time period of the study.
Nonetheless, the findings are still crucial to policy makers in Africa and other developing countries with
similar characteristics.
Originality/value – To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study in Africa to investigate the
FDI–growth nexus which accounts for financial market fragility
Description
Keywords
Africa, Foreign direct investment, Economic growth, Financial market fragility, IV strategy
Citation
Hagan, E., & Amoah, A. (2020). Foreign direct investment and economic growth nexus in Africa: new evidence from the new financial fragility measure. African Journal of Economic and Management Studies, 11(1), 1-17.
