The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).

Despite having had more than three decades of independent public policy, some countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) continue to be severely under-developed with growth rates of less than 2% during the period 1996–2006. It is the purpose of our study to examine the cross-country effects of five facto...

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Main Authors: Le, Thu Hoai., Tan, Pei Min., Tan, Wei Liang.
Other Authors: Seshanna, Shubhasree
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14245
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-142452019-12-10T14:02:21Z The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006). Le, Thu Hoai. Tan, Pei Min. Tan, Wei Liang. Seshanna, Shubhasree School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic development::Africa Despite having had more than three decades of independent public policy, some countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) continue to be severely under-developed with growth rates of less than 2% during the period 1996–2006. It is the purpose of our study to examine the cross-country effects of five factors – Entrepreneurship, Government, Ordinary Labor, Investment and Natural resources (known as the EGOIN theory) on GDP per capita covering forty-seven countries in SSA. In addition, we attempt to improvise EGOIN theory by introducing the impacts of the other three most eminent factors such as ODA, external debt and civil wars into our study. To see if these factors can explain the relatively low GDP per capita in the SSA countries, we apply Fixed-Effects (FE) and Random-Effects (RE) estimation techniques to a set of data spanning the period of 1996–2006. We ask the following questions: What are the impacts of EGOIN factors, ODA per capita, external debt per capita and civil wars have on GDP per capita? To what extent do these factors contribute to GDP per capita? Which factor sees the highest GDP per capita? Lastly, what are the salient implications for data and policy work? The results obtained in our regressions are somewhat disappointing: RL and existence of war fail to enter significantly in the determination of economic growth at the 10% level, although their signs are as expected. On the other hand, ODA per capita, FDI per capita and external debt per capita exhibit significant impact on GDP per capita at 10% level, with FDI per capita having the greatest impact on GDP per capita. Based on our empirical findings and results, in order for the region as a whole to break away successfully from the low income group classification’, we strongly feel that good governance is the key solution to this problem. Bachelor of Arts 2008-11-07T01:25:29Z 2008-11-07T01:25:29Z 2008 2008 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14245 en 55 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic development::Africa
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic development::Africa
Le, Thu Hoai.
Tan, Pei Min.
Tan, Wei Liang.
The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).
description Despite having had more than three decades of independent public policy, some countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) continue to be severely under-developed with growth rates of less than 2% during the period 1996–2006. It is the purpose of our study to examine the cross-country effects of five factors – Entrepreneurship, Government, Ordinary Labor, Investment and Natural resources (known as the EGOIN theory) on GDP per capita covering forty-seven countries in SSA. In addition, we attempt to improvise EGOIN theory by introducing the impacts of the other three most eminent factors such as ODA, external debt and civil wars into our study. To see if these factors can explain the relatively low GDP per capita in the SSA countries, we apply Fixed-Effects (FE) and Random-Effects (RE) estimation techniques to a set of data spanning the period of 1996–2006. We ask the following questions: What are the impacts of EGOIN factors, ODA per capita, external debt per capita and civil wars have on GDP per capita? To what extent do these factors contribute to GDP per capita? Which factor sees the highest GDP per capita? Lastly, what are the salient implications for data and policy work? The results obtained in our regressions are somewhat disappointing: RL and existence of war fail to enter significantly in the determination of economic growth at the 10% level, although their signs are as expected. On the other hand, ODA per capita, FDI per capita and external debt per capita exhibit significant impact on GDP per capita at 10% level, with FDI per capita having the greatest impact on GDP per capita. Based on our empirical findings and results, in order for the region as a whole to break away successfully from the low income group classification’, we strongly feel that good governance is the key solution to this problem.
author2 Seshanna, Shubhasree
author_facet Seshanna, Shubhasree
Le, Thu Hoai.
Tan, Pei Min.
Tan, Wei Liang.
format Final Year Project
author Le, Thu Hoai.
Tan, Pei Min.
Tan, Wei Liang.
author_sort Le, Thu Hoai.
title The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).
title_short The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).
title_full The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).
title_fullStr The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).
title_full_unstemmed The EGOIN theory : an analysis of Sub-Saharan Africa (1996-2006).
title_sort egoin theory : an analysis of sub-saharan africa (1996-2006).
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14245
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