External Financing for Inclusive Growth in Lower - Middle Income West African Countries: Foreign Direct Investment versus Official Development Assistance
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Date
2023Author
Ibikunle, Joseph AfolabiUzoechina, Benedict I.
Olasehinde-Williams, Godwin
Bekun, Festus Victor
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Most developing countries are plagued with harsh economic realities, which motivate them to seek
sustainable economic growth and development in line with goal eight of the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals. To this end, this paper investigated the source of external financing that is most helpful for achieving inclusive growth in lower-middle-income West African
countries. The study is a panel analysis of annual data extending from 2000 to 2019. The study
employed the Emirmahmutoglu and Kose Bootstrap Granger Causality Test, Westerlund
Cointegration Test, Common Correlated Mean Group estimation technique, and Augmented
Mean Group estimation technique for econometric analyses. The long-run empirical results from
the study showed that both foreign direct investment and foreign aid have positive and significant
effects on inclusive growth, although the impact of foreign direct investment is greater than that of
foreign aid. A bi-directional causality was also found to exist between inclusive growth and foreign
direct investment, while no causal relationship was detected between inclusive growth and foreign
aid. Given the study’s empirical outcomes, it is recommended that West African countries prioritize
macroeconomic policy reforms that provide enabling conditions for foreign direct investment to
thrive rather than pursue foreign aid that more often than not are misdirected.
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