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Socioeconomic Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa with Reference to Southeast Asia :Natural Resources or Institutions?

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dc.contributor.advisor권혁주-
dc.contributor.author카토카벤-
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-27T17:19:21Z-
dc.date.available2017-10-27T17:19:21Z-
dc.date.issued2017-08-
dc.identifier.other000000145359-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/137231-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 행정대학원 행정학과, 2017. 8. 권혁주.-
dc.description.abstractThis study addresses three questions: (1) how Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) performs in economic and social indicators relative to Southeast Asia (SEA)-
dc.description.abstract(2) whether and how abundance in natural resources and institutional quality influence patterns of socioeconomic performance across and within the two regions-
dc.description.abstractand (3) to what extent interactions between institutional quality and abundance in natural resources determine economic and social outcomes. It covers the period from 1990 to 2015 for a set of forty-five SSA and nine SEA countries.
The analysis applies three measures to capture socioeconomic performance: (1) per capita GDP growth
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dc.description.abstract(2) foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows-
dc.description.abstractand (3) infant mortality rate. It uses the World Banks Regulatory Quality (RQ) indicator as the institutional quality measure-
dc.description.abstractand the share of natural resource exports in percentage of total merchandise exports as a measure for resource abundance. Further, the analysis controls for a range of variables that may potentially influence per capita GDP growth, FDI, and infant mortality. These variables include inflation rates, government expenditure, official development aid (ODA), population growth, and the share of urban population in percentage of total population.
The interest in such analysis originated in the observation that poor institutional quality or governance and abundance in natural resources, often argued to explain SSAs development problems, are in fact also present in a large part of SEA. For instance, many countries in both regions are among the worlds most corrupt according to the Transparency Internationals Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) and are similarly richly endowed in natural resources such as oil and gas. Another motivation for this analysis is that no empirical work has been done using cross-national longitudinal statistics to address the question on how certain factors, in particular institutions and natural resources, influence economic and social outcomes in the two regions.
For that purpose, the study draws upon two analytical perspectives: (1) the institutional perspective (institutions as the fundamental cause of good economic performance)
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dc.description.abstractand (2) the resource curse perspective (abundance or dependence on natural resources, especially minerals and oil, adversely affects economic performance). In addition, the study accounts for the explanation according to which socioeconomic performance, especially in SSA, may be linked to physical or geographic causes.
The main findings can be summarized as follows: first, keeping constant institutional quality, abundance in natural resources, and other variables, a country located in SSA has lower per capita GDP growth, lower flows of inward FDI, and higher infant mortality relative to a country located in SEA. In other words, despite similarities in the measured institutional level in both regions, SEA experiences better economic and social outcomes compared to SSA.
Second, a country that improves its institutional quality—RQ—is likely to experience higher per capita GDP growth, larger FDI inflows, and lower infant mortality, irrespective of whether it is located in SSA or SEA. Better-performing-countries in both regions tend to have higher RQ scores compared to the poor-performing-countries. Among the countries with better RQ, however, those located in SEA perform somewhat better than their counterparts located in SSA.
Finally, abundance in natural resources does not necessarily have adverse effects on economic outcomes. In SSA for instance, per capita GDP growth and FDI inflows are greater for resource-abundant countries than for their resource-scarce counterparts. Further, resource-abundant countries with good RQ have higher economic growth and receive more FDI than either countries with abundant natural resources and poor RQ, or no resources with good RQ, or non-resources with poor RQ.
Overall, these findings have important implications for empirical research on the role of institutional quality in explaining differences in economic and social outcomes across countries. This studys main contribution is to understand how countries that display similar measured level of institutional quality or governance may experience different economic and social outcomes.
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dc.description.tableofcontents1.Introduction 1
1.1. Background, objectives, and significance 1
1.2. Structure of the Thesis 6
2. Review of Related Literature 9
2.1. Description 9
2.2. Institutions and socioeconomic performance 10
2.3. Natural resources and socioeconomic performance 13
2.3.1. The resource curse thesis 13
2.3.2. Insitutional quality and the resource curse 17
2.4. Existing comparative studies on SSA and SEA (and other regions) 22
2.5. Summary 27
3. Natural Resources, Institutions, and Socioeconomic Performance in SSA 30
3.1. Introduction 30
3.2. Economic growth, FDI, and infant mortality in SSA 32
3.2.1. Growth performance, 1990-2015 32
3.2.2. Foreign direct investment 33
3.2.3. Infant mortality 35
3.3. Resource-abundant versus resource-scarce countries 36
3.3.1. Per capita GDP growth 37
3.3.2. Infant mortality 38
3.3.3. Foreign direct investment 39
3.4. Comparing performance across individual countries 42
3.4.1. Per capita GDP growth 42
3.4.2. Foreign direct investment 43
3.4.3. Infant mortality 44
3.5. Summary 45
4. Natural Resources, Institutional Quality, and Socioeconomic performance in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia 47
4.1. Introduction 47
4.2. Performance in some selected economic and social indicators 51
4.2.1. Economic growth 52
4.2.2. Foreign direct investment 57
4.2.3. Social development 60
4.3. Institutional quality and socioeconomic performance 64
4.3.1. Performance in institutional indicators 64
4.3.2. Institutional quality and socioeconomic outcomes 68
4.4. Resource-abundance and socioeconomic performance 72
4.5. Institutional quality versus resource-abundance 78
4.6. Summary 81
5. Concepts and Empirical Methodology 84
5.1. Background and Structure of the Chapter 84
5.2. Concepts 85
5.2.1. Measuring natural resources and resource-abundance/dependence 85
5.2.2. Measuring institutions 89
5.2.3. Measuring socioeconomic performance 97
5.3. Empirical Methodology 101
6. Empirical Analysis and Findings 109
6.1. Background and structure of the chapter 109
6.2. Regression specifications and data 111
6.3. Empirical findings 127
6.3.1. Estimation of the full sample (SSA versus SEA) 128
6.3.2. Estimation of the SSA sub-sample (resource-abudant versus resource-scarce) 143
6.5. Summary 146
7. Implications and Conclusions 148
7.1. Summary of principle findings 148
7.2. Discussion of principle findings and implications 153
7.2.1. Explaining SSA backwardness relative to SEA 154
7.2.2. Explaining the varying impact of Regulatory Quality on socioeconomic performance between SSA and SEA 156
7.2.3. Explaining the effects of abundance in natural resources 160
7.3. Unanswered questions and concluding remarks 163
Appendix 1. Findings from Sachs and Warner (1995) and others 166
Appendix 2. Estimation using alternative institutional variables 168
Appendix 3. Estimation using alternative dependent variables 172
Appendix 4. Inflation rate in SSA and SEA, 1995-2015 174
Appendix 5. Rural sector performance in SSA and SEA, 2004-2015 175
Appendix 6. Comparing Business Regulations between SSA and SEA 176
Appendix 7. Comparing institutional weakness, prevalence of violent conflicts, Dutch disease, and volatility between resource-abundant and resource-scarce countries in SSA 186
Bibliography 187
국문초록 197
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent2230182 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 행정대학원-
dc.subjectSub-Saharan Africa-
dc.subjectSouth-East Asia-
dc.subjectRegulatory Quality-
dc.subjectinstitutions-
dc.subjectresource abundance-
dc.subjectpanel data-
dc.subject.ddc350-
dc.titleSocioeconomic Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa with Reference to Southeast Asia :Natural Resources or Institutions?-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.contributor.affiliation행정대학원 행정학과-
dc.date.awarded2017-08-
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