This study develops a model of opportunistic behaviour in which an incumbent government resorts to expansionary fiscal and/or monetary stimuli to foster economic growth and thus, maximize the probability of re-election. Using a panel dataset of 31 African countries covering the period 1980 to 2009, we test whether donor aid facilitates such political business cycles and investigate their effect on growth. We find evidence that donors, through guaranteeing support to incumbent governments, may unwittingly instigate political business cycles. With forbearance, and sometimes complicity by donors, aid seems to allow incumbent governments to instigate macroeconomic stimuli that ensure electoral victory with no fear of losing aid support
This study examines the hypothesis that foreign aid dilutes the positive role of taxation on politic...
We investigate the effects of short-term political motivations on the effectiveness of foreign aid. ...
This study examines the hypothesis that foreign aid dilutes the positive role of taxation on politic...
This study develops a model of opportunistic behaviour in which an incumbent government resorts to e...
Significant ambiguity still surrounds the aid-growth relationship despite fifty years of research on...
The study examines the impact of aid on economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa and also investigates ...
Taking a panel of 54 African countries and employing pooled, GLS, and panel regression, this study i...
Over the past two decades, donors increasingly link foreign aid to democracy objectives in Africa. T...
The paper discusses the impact of foreign aid on economic growth in Africa. After brief discussion a...
Significant ambiguity still surrounds the aid-growth relationship despite fifty years of research on...
This paper investigates whether foreign aid volatility affects economic growth in countries with an ...
Significant ambiguity surrounds the magnitude and sign of the effect of foreign aid on economic grow...
This study aims at understanding the impact of foreign aid on the economic growth of the Sub Saharan...
This paper assesses the effectiveness of foreign aid in improving government institutions in 52 Afri...
This study examined the relationship between foreign aid and economic development in Sub-Saharan Afr...
This study examines the hypothesis that foreign aid dilutes the positive role of taxation on politic...
We investigate the effects of short-term political motivations on the effectiveness of foreign aid. ...
This study examines the hypothesis that foreign aid dilutes the positive role of taxation on politic...
This study develops a model of opportunistic behaviour in which an incumbent government resorts to e...
Significant ambiguity still surrounds the aid-growth relationship despite fifty years of research on...
The study examines the impact of aid on economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa and also investigates ...
Taking a panel of 54 African countries and employing pooled, GLS, and panel regression, this study i...
Over the past two decades, donors increasingly link foreign aid to democracy objectives in Africa. T...
The paper discusses the impact of foreign aid on economic growth in Africa. After brief discussion a...
Significant ambiguity still surrounds the aid-growth relationship despite fifty years of research on...
This paper investigates whether foreign aid volatility affects economic growth in countries with an ...
Significant ambiguity surrounds the magnitude and sign of the effect of foreign aid on economic grow...
This study aims at understanding the impact of foreign aid on the economic growth of the Sub Saharan...
This paper assesses the effectiveness of foreign aid in improving government institutions in 52 Afri...
This study examined the relationship between foreign aid and economic development in Sub-Saharan Afr...
This study examines the hypothesis that foreign aid dilutes the positive role of taxation on politic...
We investigate the effects of short-term political motivations on the effectiveness of foreign aid. ...
This study examines the hypothesis that foreign aid dilutes the positive role of taxation on politic...