Can Africa's saving collapse be reversed?

WORLD BANK ECONOMIC REVIEW(2000)

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摘要
Private saving in Sub-Saharan Africa declined from more than 11 percent of disposable income in the 1970s to less than 8 percent in the 1980s and only partially recovered ito less than 9 percent) in the 1990s. This article analyzes the determinants of private saving in Sub-Saharan Africa, seeking to explain the region's dismal performance and identify policies that could help to reverse the region's decline in saving. The analysis shows that in Sub-Saharan Africa causality runs from growth to investment land perhaps to private saving), whereas a rise in the saving rate Granger-causes an increase in investment. Foreign aid Granger-causes a reduction in both saving and investment, and investment also Granger-causes art increase in foreign aid. The empirical analysis of private saving in Sub-Saharan Africa and other regions over 1970-95 suggests that private saving in Africa can be explained by standard behavioral models. According to these models private saving in Africa lags behind that in other regions (most notably, the high performing Asian economies) because of the region's lower per capita income, high young-age dependency ratio, and high dependence on aid. The combined effects of these factors substantially outweigh Africa's advantage from its lower public saving and higher government consumption. Finally, analysis of the experiences of Kenya, Zimbabwe, and Botswana provides further insight into the saving process in Sub-Saharan Africa.
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bond,financial market,marginal productivity,per capita income,economic development,market economy,national income,productivity growth,sustainable growth,economic growth,trade liberalization,demographic,consumer durables,financial system,monetary policy,developing economies,financial analysis,increasing returns,development economics,government policy,financial markets,physical capital,real gdp,capital accumulation,developing economy,inflation,productivity,transaction costs,virtuous cycle,economic liberalization,corruption,dividends,financial intermediaries,public policies,international trade,liberalization,savings,interest rate,public policy,comparative analysis,consumers,social development,tax revenues,political economy,fiscal policy,government policies,insurance,asymmetric information,volatility,accounting,behavior modeling,economic policy,liquidity,production function,real interest rate,shadow pricing,urbanization,financial instruments,gross domestic product,real gross domestic product,developing countries,gdp
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