The role of foreign aids and income inequality in poverty reduction: A sustainable development approach for Africa?
Abstract
In the last decades, international interventions mostly through foreign aids have consistently been directed toward sustainable development objectives such as reduction of poverty
in African countries. Thus, this study investigates the efect of foreign aids and income
inequality in poverty reduction in Africa for 1990–2016. The novelty lies in the investigation of the efectiveness of aid remittances to Africa from the United Nations and Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) which has previously been
overlooked in extant studies. By using the system Generalized Method of Moments, the
study showed that the interaction of inequality with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) funds and OECD Ofcial Development Assistance is not statistically signifcant. Meanwhile, the interventions from the UNDP funds and OECD Ofcial Development Assistance statistically yield signifcant and expected results of reducing poverty
in the poor continent. However, the study surprisingly failed to establish that remittances
from the UNDP have signifcantly mitigated poverty in Africa. Importantly, this study presents a signifcant policy guide for the governments and the stakeholders and recommends
that the donor agencies adopt poverty-reduction, and income distribution-based criteria for
the allocation of their resources to reduce poverty in the continent.
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