Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects

Using a panel database of 48 Sub-Saharan African countries from 2000 to 2012 that we partially constructed, this paper analyses the structure of housing finance in Africa, its determinants, and its impact on inclusive growth. We find that market capitalization and urbanization are key positive determinants of housing finance, while a post-conflict environment is conducive to greater housing finance development. This result suggests that housing finance is driven by standard market forces of demand and supply. Besides, we find that housing finance development in Africa is not yet an effective tool for reducing economic inequality, at its current, very earlier stage. However, we show that above a given threshold, housing finance could be efficient at reducing inequality. Finally, there is a slightly positive relationship between housing finance and greater economic development in Africa. All these findings suggest that policies to boost housing finance development in Africa would be fruitful in the medium to long terms.

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Main Authors: Nguena, Christian-Lambert, Tchana, Fulbert Tchana, Zeufack, Albert G.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Published: Taylor and Francis 2021-04
Subjects:HOUSING FINANCE, INCLUSIVE GROWTH, SHARED PROSPERITY,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35877
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spelling dig-okr-10986358772021-07-20T18:56:53Z Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects Nguena, Christian-Lambert Tchana, Fulbert Tchana Zeufack, Albert G. HOUSING FINANCE INCLUSIVE GROWTH SHARED PROSPERITY Using a panel database of 48 Sub-Saharan African countries from 2000 to 2012 that we partially constructed, this paper analyses the structure of housing finance in Africa, its determinants, and its impact on inclusive growth. We find that market capitalization and urbanization are key positive determinants of housing finance, while a post-conflict environment is conducive to greater housing finance development. This result suggests that housing finance is driven by standard market forces of demand and supply. Besides, we find that housing finance development in Africa is not yet an effective tool for reducing economic inequality, at its current, very earlier stage. However, we show that above a given threshold, housing finance could be efficient at reducing inequality. Finally, there is a slightly positive relationship between housing finance and greater economic development in Africa. All these findings suggest that policies to boost housing finance development in Africa would be fruitful in the medium to long terms. 2021-06-30T19:24:58Z 2021-06-30T19:24:58Z 2021-04 Journal Article International Economic Journal 1016-8737 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35877 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Journal Article Africa Sub-Saharan Africa
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic HOUSING FINANCE
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
SHARED PROSPERITY
HOUSING FINANCE
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
SHARED PROSPERITY
spellingShingle HOUSING FINANCE
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
SHARED PROSPERITY
HOUSING FINANCE
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
SHARED PROSPERITY
Nguena, Christian-Lambert
Tchana, Fulbert Tchana
Zeufack, Albert G.
Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects
description Using a panel database of 48 Sub-Saharan African countries from 2000 to 2012 that we partially constructed, this paper analyses the structure of housing finance in Africa, its determinants, and its impact on inclusive growth. We find that market capitalization and urbanization are key positive determinants of housing finance, while a post-conflict environment is conducive to greater housing finance development. This result suggests that housing finance is driven by standard market forces of demand and supply. Besides, we find that housing finance development in Africa is not yet an effective tool for reducing economic inequality, at its current, very earlier stage. However, we show that above a given threshold, housing finance could be efficient at reducing inequality. Finally, there is a slightly positive relationship between housing finance and greater economic development in Africa. All these findings suggest that policies to boost housing finance development in Africa would be fruitful in the medium to long terms.
format Journal Article
topic_facet HOUSING FINANCE
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
SHARED PROSPERITY
author Nguena, Christian-Lambert
Tchana, Fulbert Tchana
Zeufack, Albert G.
author_facet Nguena, Christian-Lambert
Tchana, Fulbert Tchana
Zeufack, Albert G.
author_sort Nguena, Christian-Lambert
title Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects
title_short Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects
title_full Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects
title_fullStr Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects
title_full_unstemmed Housing Finance and Inclusive Growth in Africa : Benchmarking, Determinants and Effects
title_sort housing finance and inclusive growth in africa : benchmarking, determinants and effects
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2021-04
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35877
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AT zeufackalbertg housingfinanceandinclusivegrowthinafricabenchmarkingdeterminantsandeffects
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