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Aid, Growth, Policies and Fragility

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posted on 2024-10-30, 21:17 authored by Mark McGillivray, Simon FeenySimon Feeny
The impact of aid on per capita income growth has been a particularly controversial topic among researchers and policy-makers alike. Most studies agree that growth would be lower in the absence of aid. This is evident from comprehensive literature surveys of aid and growth studies, including Hansen and Tarp (2000), Morrissey (2001), McGillivray et al. (2006), Mekasha and Tarp (2011) and Clemens et al. (2012). There is no such agreement in this literature regarding what might be described as the contingencies on which the impact of aid on growth is partially dependent. Debate over this topic is intensive and a failure to reach agreement over it is arguably the principal failing of the aid-growth literature owing to the potential guidance such agreement could provide for the selection of interventions aimed at improving aid effectiveness. Debate on aid-growth contingencies commenced after publication of the pioneering econometric investigation of Burnside and Dollar (1997, 2000). Burnside and Dollar multiplicatively interacted aid with a measure of policy, and found that aid only had a positive impact on growth in developing countries with good fiscal, monetary, and trade policies. Subsequent studies have sought to test the robustness of the Burnside and Dollar result, test for the relevance of different contingencies, or both. No study has been able to replicate the Burnside and Dollar result, and as such there is widespread concern in the research community over its robustness.

History

Start page

375

End page

389

Total pages

15

Outlet

Handbook on the Economics of Foreign Aid

Editors

B. Mak Arvin, Byron Lew

Publisher

Edward Elgar Publishing

Place published

Cheltenham, United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 B. Mak Arvin and Byron Lew

Former Identifier

2006055616

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-12-02

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