Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability?
This paper analyses the determinants of both short and medium-term current account deficits in Africa, and finds that countries are more likely to have a deficit exceeding 5% if the economy is small, less open and diverse, and is experiencing macroeconomic instability. Less democratic governments also have a higher probability of running a deficit. Overall, the main message is that though most African economies are characterized by current account deficits, only a few have real concerns regarding the sustainability of this imbalance As long as these countries can finance their deficits via aid and debt accumulation, they face no immediate crisis. However, this allows these economies to continue with the status quo rather than addressing the structural causes of the deficit such as export supply constraints due to poor infrastructure.
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2007-11
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10855/3720 |
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dig-uneca-et-10855-37202020-11-05T21:59:58Z Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? Current account deficits in Africa : do they matter? African Economic Conference 2007 : opportunities and challenges of development for Africa in the global arena This paper analyses the determinants of both short and medium-term current account deficits in Africa, and finds that countries are more likely to have a deficit exceeding 5% if the economy is small, less open and diverse, and is experiencing macroeconomic instability. Less democratic governments also have a higher probability of running a deficit. Overall, the main message is that though most African economies are characterized by current account deficits, only a few have real concerns regarding the sustainability of this imbalance As long as these countries can finance their deficits via aid and debt accumulation, they face no immediate crisis. However, this allows these economies to continue with the status quo rather than addressing the structural causes of the deficit such as export supply constraints due to poor infrastructure. 2011-03-23T14:38:15Z 2011-03-23T14:38:15Z 2007-11 Conference document http://hdl.handle.net/10855/3720 eng 21 p. : application/pdf AFR |
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This paper analyses the determinants of both short and medium-term current account deficits in Africa, and finds that countries are more likely to have a deficit exceeding 5% if the economy is small, less open and diverse, and is experiencing macroeconomic instability. Less democratic governments also have a higher probability of running a deficit. Overall, the main message is that though most African economies are characterized by current account deficits, only a few have real concerns regarding the sustainability of this imbalance As long as these countries can finance their deficits via aid and debt accumulation, they face no immediate crisis. However, this allows these economies to continue with the status quo rather than addressing the structural causes of the deficit such as export supply constraints due to poor infrastructure. |
format |
Conference document |
title |
Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
spellingShingle |
Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
title_short |
Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
title_full |
Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
title_fullStr |
Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Current account in Sub-Saharan Africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
title_sort |
current account in sub-saharan africa : should policymakers worry about sustainability? |
publishDate |
2007-11 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10855/3720 |
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1762933465286705152 |