This paper argues that the greater the liberalization of imports in a Sub-Saharan African country, the more significant is the decline in its rate of growth due to the recession in high income economies during the late eighties and early nineties. This could be explained by the fact that when industrial countries are suffering from recession, the terms of trade may move in favor of developing countries due to a fall in the dollar price of importables. The volume of competitive imports may not rise in this circumstance in a country that has a well designed 'interventionist' trade regime.
South Africa has undergone significant trade liberalization since the end of apartheid. Average prot...
Southern Africa’s contribution to global output remains depressed at less than 2% of global producti...
Abstract The author argues in this chapter that trade liberalization in Africa during the last coupl...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner thatother developing regions ...
We explore dynamic non-stationarity panel data estimators namely, mean group (MG) and pooled mean gr...
Despite the various efforts made to promote sustainable economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa, there...
abstract: For many years, the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, like many other unindustrialized nati...
This paper offers some econometric evidence on the sources of slow growth in Sub-Saharan Africa. The...
This study empirically investigates the growth implication of trade liberalization in twelve West Af...
A major discourse in literature is that one of the causes of the limited growth effects of trade lib...
This paper use the dynamic growth framework to model the relationship between trade liberalization p...
This thesis examines the impact of trade liberalisation on export growth, import growth, balance of ...
This empirical paper adopts panel data methodologies to investigate the impact of trade liberalisati...
The policies of adjustment pursued in the 1980s and 1990s promised African countries not only 'accel...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner that other developing regions...
South Africa has undergone significant trade liberalization since the end of apartheid. Average prot...
Southern Africa’s contribution to global output remains depressed at less than 2% of global producti...
Abstract The author argues in this chapter that trade liberalization in Africa during the last coupl...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner thatother developing regions ...
We explore dynamic non-stationarity panel data estimators namely, mean group (MG) and pooled mean gr...
Despite the various efforts made to promote sustainable economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa, there...
abstract: For many years, the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, like many other unindustrialized nati...
This paper offers some econometric evidence on the sources of slow growth in Sub-Saharan Africa. The...
This study empirically investigates the growth implication of trade liberalization in twelve West Af...
A major discourse in literature is that one of the causes of the limited growth effects of trade lib...
This paper use the dynamic growth framework to model the relationship between trade liberalization p...
This thesis examines the impact of trade liberalisation on export growth, import growth, balance of ...
This empirical paper adopts panel data methodologies to investigate the impact of trade liberalisati...
The policies of adjustment pursued in the 1980s and 1990s promised African countries not only 'accel...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner that other developing regions...
South Africa has undergone significant trade liberalization since the end of apartheid. Average prot...
Southern Africa’s contribution to global output remains depressed at less than 2% of global producti...
Abstract The author argues in this chapter that trade liberalization in Africa during the last coupl...