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Corruption and growth in Africa
Institution:1. University Ca'' Foscari, Venice, Fondamenta San Giobbe — Cannaregio, 873, 30121 Venezia, Italy;2. University of Cape Town (RSA), Private Bag, Rondebosch, 7701 Cape Town, South Africa;3. University of Perugia, Via Alessandro Pascoli, 06123 Perugia, Italy;1. Monitoring and Evaluation Division, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, Kenya;2. Department of Economics, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, United States
Abstract:A major concern in the development of African economies is the impact of corruption on economic growth and while there is general agreement on its detrimental effects, there is considerable debate over its nature and importance. In particular there is little work on the interaction between corruption, government expenditures and how this influences economic growth in countries in the region. This paper takes an endogenous growth model, extends it to include different categories of government spending and then introduces the possibility of corruption, which is allowed to have different effects on each of the categories. The results confirm the negative effect of corruption and military spending, but also show that corruption interacts with military burden, through indirect and complementary effects, to further increase its negative effect. The policy implications are that the effects of corruption on economic growth are worse than was thought in countries which have high military burdens.
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