Title: Aid, Policies and Performance: Africas G11
1Aid, Policies and Performance Africas G11
Francois Bourguignon, Alan Gelb and Bruno
Versailles, DECVP, April 2006.
2Which African Countries Have Grown in Last Decade
and Why?
- A complex relationship policies, aid, oil,
conflict..hard to disentangle for causality - Use a simple methodology analyze performance by
country group - Partition countries by growth and aid
- Construct G11 poor, high-aid-high-growth
non-oil countries, and a control group (excluding
conflict countries) - Methodology is in between regressions and case
studies. Cross-country regressions miss a lot of
the country-specific factors.
3Country Groupings1994-2003The G11 and Control
Group
4Features of the G11 and Control
- GDP/head growth 2.5, 0.2
- Aid/DGP 17.5 12.8
- Policy rating 3.42 3.14
- Change in rating -0.07 0.51
- Income/head 228 321
- Fast-growing countries have combined good
(improving) policies and aid. But some
countries in control have also received a lot of
aid. - Three other features also shape the pattern
- Low-aid-high-growth often have oil
- High-aid low-growth often conflict countries
- Landlocked countries are poorer, get somewhat
more aid and do a little worse
5Aid and Development the Debate
- Can aid underpin a process of improving policies,
institutions and development performance? - Or does aid cause Dutch Disease, as shown by
- Weakening macro falling savings, taxes
- Weakening competitiveness appreciating real
exchange rates, low export growth and
diversification - Deteriorating governance.
- Are the G11 on a path towards sustainable growth?
-
6MacroManagement strengthened in G11, weakened in
Control
7S and I rose in G11from low base
And S and I weakened in Control
8Tax/GDP rose in G11 even as trade taxes declined
with liberalization
Tax/GDP fell in Control
9Real Exchange Rates initial appreciation but
reversed
No clear patterns. Real Ex Rates may follow
Terms of Trade more than aid
10Real Exports grew and diversified
- Real export growth averaged 6.6 for G11 and 4.8
for control. - Share of top 3 commodities declined, especially
in G11. In Senegal, Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania and
Mali - Non-traditional exports grew at 17,
traditional exports at 4 - The share of non-traditional exports rose from
20 to 42
11Diversification Stronger in G11 than in rest of
SSA
12FDI to G11 rose steadily
Even though the G11 lack oil or major mining
13Institutions Strengthened in G11 especially
relative to SSA average
KKZ indices of Institutional quality and
corruption show similar relative trend
14Considerable Gains in Public Financial Management
in G11
15.this pattern is confirmed by HIPC PFM Indicators
- Between 2001 and 2004, for those countries
covered by the Public Financial Management
tracking indicators - the average number of HIPC PFM Benchmarks met by
G11 increased from 6.5 to 8.0, - but scores for the control group deteriorated
from 4.75 to 4.5 - However, quality of public administration may
have declined across all groups. This is a
matter of concern.
16Political Rights saw major gains in G11
Freedom House Indicator 7 not free, 1 free
17Was Growth Reflected in Progress towards MDGs?
- Only some countries have 2 comparable surveys to
measure poverty trends 8 in the G11 and 3 in
the Control - For the G11 countries, poverty headcount decline
averaged 1.2 percentage points per year, higher
than SSA MDG target - For the Control poverty headcount increased at
2.2 percentage points
18Poverty Decline in G11
Growth has been poverty-reducing
19Poverty Increase in Control
20The Picture is Less Clear on Other MDGs
- Health G11 not much better except on
immunization rates
21Education G11 makes somewhat faster gains but
from a low base
22Conclusions
- Looking at patterns does not prove causality. But
it can help to disentangle some of the factors
underlying the aid-growth story. - The G11 shows that
- aid can underpin a process of growth, with
improving policies and institutions - growth reduces poverty
- but gains in social indicators may be slow
- This may relate to slow progress on quality of
public administration.
23Conclusions (contd)
- There is little specific evidence that Dutch
Disease dominates outcomes in the G11 - Aid may remove bottlenecks, or its adverse
side-effects be compensated by improving policies
and institutions. - We need to recognize and understand success.
- However, some poorly-performing countries have
continued to receive a lot of aid. - Often conflict countries (aid is endogenous)
- But include others, like Zambia, Malawi, Gambia
- Understanding the failures is also important for
credibility
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