INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS

Over the years, the world has experienced increased and persistent levels of high government debts. This situation has been fuelled by the sluggish economic growth rates and weak revenue collections, particularly in the sub-Saharan region. Using the auto-distributive lag (ARDL) model, the study inve...

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Main Authors: Lerato Mothibi, Precious Mncayi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Sciences Research Society 2019-06-01
Series:International Journal of eBusiness and eGovernment Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/ijebeg/issue/45624/578583
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spelling doaj-52b162b61c764312ab7b2214ed7391922020-11-25T00:27:22ZengSocial Sciences Research SocietyInternational Journal of eBusiness and eGovernment Studies2146-07442019-06-01111163310.34111/ijebeg.20191112INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS Lerato MothibiPrecious MncayiOver the years, the world has experienced increased and persistent levels of high government debts. This situation has been fuelled by the sluggish economic growth rates and weak revenue collections, particularly in the sub-Saharan region. Using the auto-distributive lag (ARDL) model, the study investigates the key drivers of government debt in South Africa from 1994 to 2017. Findings of this study revealed that there is long-run relationship between government debt and government expenditure, real GDP, inflation and real interest rates, with government expenditure, real GDP and interest rates being the key drivers of government debt in South Africa. Government debt has had a negative impact on economic growth and inflation. In the short run, there are no significant interactions between inflation, real interest rates and government debt. To reduce government debt, the South African government should lean towards improving its productive capacity, controlling interest rates and eliminating non-productive expenditure. Factors such as bailout spending on non-performing and problematic state entities may be avoided by opening for competition to ease the burden off the state as a sole or main funder.https://dergipark.org.tr/ijebeg/issue/45624/578583Government debtgovernment spendingeconomic performanceindebted countriesSouth Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lerato Mothibi
Precious Mncayi
spellingShingle Lerato Mothibi
Precious Mncayi
INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS
International Journal of eBusiness and eGovernment Studies
Government debt
government spending
economic performance
indebted countries
South Africa
author_facet Lerato Mothibi
Precious Mncayi
author_sort Lerato Mothibi
title INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS
title_short INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS
title_full INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS
title_fullStr INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS
title_full_unstemmed INVESTIGATING THE KEY DRIVERS OF GOVERNMENT DEBT IN SOUTH AFRICA: A POST-APARTHEID ANALYSIS
title_sort investigating the key drivers of government debt in south africa: a post-apartheid analysis
publisher Social Sciences Research Society
series International Journal of eBusiness and eGovernment Studies
issn 2146-0744
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Over the years, the world has experienced increased and persistent levels of high government debts. This situation has been fuelled by the sluggish economic growth rates and weak revenue collections, particularly in the sub-Saharan region. Using the auto-distributive lag (ARDL) model, the study investigates the key drivers of government debt in South Africa from 1994 to 2017. Findings of this study revealed that there is long-run relationship between government debt and government expenditure, real GDP, inflation and real interest rates, with government expenditure, real GDP and interest rates being the key drivers of government debt in South Africa. Government debt has had a negative impact on economic growth and inflation. In the short run, there are no significant interactions between inflation, real interest rates and government debt. To reduce government debt, the South African government should lean towards improving its productive capacity, controlling interest rates and eliminating non-productive expenditure. Factors such as bailout spending on non-performing and problematic state entities may be avoided by opening for competition to ease the burden off the state as a sole or main funder.
topic Government debt
government spending
economic performance
indebted countries
South Africa
url https://dergipark.org.tr/ijebeg/issue/45624/578583
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