Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach

This paper examined the extent to which leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions impact on economic growth. A unique panel dataset, comprising 44 sub-Sahara African countries from 1970 to 2010, was used for the study. We used the differenced generalized methods of moments’ estimation to test...

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Main Author: Frank Gyimah Sackey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Social Sciences and Humanities Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291121000437
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spelling doaj-0e4faf6d58ce415c8a492c77046153492021-04-10T04:17:19ZengElsevierSocial Sciences and Humanities Open2590-29112021-01-0141100147Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approachFrank Gyimah Sackey0Ghana Communication Technology University, PMB 100, Tesano, Accra, GhanaThis paper examined the extent to which leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions impact on economic growth. A unique panel dataset, comprising 44 sub-Sahara African countries from 1970 to 2010, was used for the study. We used the differenced generalized methods of moments’ estimation to test our dynamic model for the dataset controlling for leader specific effects. We observed that democratic leaders were able to attract foreign direct investment and impact on economic growth positively. With regard to regime transitions, we observed that business cycle existed, and it reduced the rate of growth in democratic governance in election periods as compared to autocratic governance. Overall, our results show that there is a limit to which an ageing leader can stay in office. Moreover, the overall results point to a democratic governance having an advantage over an autocratic one in the process of promoting increased and sustainable growth and investments.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291121000437Leader characteristicsRegime transitionsDemocratic leaderAutocratic leaderEconomic growthSub-Sahara Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frank Gyimah Sackey
spellingShingle Frank Gyimah Sackey
Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach
Social Sciences and Humanities Open
Leader characteristics
Regime transitions
Democratic leader
Autocratic leader
Economic growth
Sub-Sahara Africa
author_facet Frank Gyimah Sackey
author_sort Frank Gyimah Sackey
title Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach
title_short Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach
title_full Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach
title_fullStr Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach
title_full_unstemmed Impact of African leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in Africa: A dynamic model approach
title_sort impact of african leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions on economic growth in africa: a dynamic model approach
publisher Elsevier
series Social Sciences and Humanities Open
issn 2590-2911
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This paper examined the extent to which leaders’ characteristics and regime transitions impact on economic growth. A unique panel dataset, comprising 44 sub-Sahara African countries from 1970 to 2010, was used for the study. We used the differenced generalized methods of moments’ estimation to test our dynamic model for the dataset controlling for leader specific effects. We observed that democratic leaders were able to attract foreign direct investment and impact on economic growth positively. With regard to regime transitions, we observed that business cycle existed, and it reduced the rate of growth in democratic governance in election periods as compared to autocratic governance. Overall, our results show that there is a limit to which an ageing leader can stay in office. Moreover, the overall results point to a democratic governance having an advantage over an autocratic one in the process of promoting increased and sustainable growth and investments.
topic Leader characteristics
Regime transitions
Democratic leader
Autocratic leader
Economic growth
Sub-Sahara Africa
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291121000437
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