Illicit financial outflows, informal sector size and domestic resource mobilization in selected African countries
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Tarih
2021Yazar
Uzoechina, Benedict IkemefunaIbikunle, Joseph Afolabi
Olasehinde-Williams, Godwin
Bekun, Festus Victor
Üst veri
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Purpose –The growth of both the informal sector and illicit financial outflows necessitated this study, in order
to investigate how countries in Africa respond to these realities in terms of mobilization of domestic resources.
These are the main motivation for the current study to the extant literature in conjunction with the adoption of
employing second-generation econometric techniques which take into account cross-sectional dependence and
country-specific heterogeneity.
Design/methodology/approach – This study therefore examined the capacity of Africa to mobilize
domestic resources amidst rising illicit financial outflows and informal sector size in selected African countries
between 2000 and 2018. Second-generation econometric techniques such as cross-sectional dependence tests,
slope homogeneity tests, Westerlund (2007) long-run co-integration tests, Eberhardt and Teal (2010)
augmented mean group estimations and K onya (2006) panel causality testing were employed.
Findings – Findings revealed the existence of cross-sectional dependence and slope homogeneity in the data
series. Findings also supported the existence of depressing long-run impacts of IFOs and ISS on domestic
savings. Causality test results were not uniform across variables among countries. Policy recommendations
favour formalizing the largely informal African economies through budgetary policy adjustments and
commitment to building stronger institutions.
Practical implications – The fragility of the African countries economy and its macroeconomic indicators is
suggestive for more policy construction.
Originality/value – This economic reality about the nature of the informal sector is one that has negated the
traditional view which holds that economic reforms would make the informal sector shrink as it transits to
formal sector. Experiences from Latin America and Africa in fact indicate that the informal sector is actually on
an expansionary path in the wake of adjustment and policy reforms. It is often called the unobserved,
unorganized or unprotected economy. With this sector growing in size, the possibility of a reverse may not be in
sight, owing to the increasing poverty levels and unemployment prevalent in most African countries. Uncertain
foreign investment and aid inflows coupled with lower export revenues and high levels of indebtedness have
created new impetus to examine the capacity of Africa’s fiscal policy regime to mobilise domestic resources for
the development of the region. Surprisingly, the last decade witnessed continued rise in Africa’s illicit financial
outflows amidst large informal sector size (ISS).
Bağlantı
https://hdl.handle.net/11363/5257Koleksiyonlar
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