Arbeitspapier

Africa's Great Moderation

Autoren

  • Krantz
  • S.
Erscheinungsdatum

Over the past 30 years (1990-2019), African economies have experienced remarkable improvements
in real macroeconomic conditions, characterized by higher and more stable real per-capita growth
rates, and lower and more stable inflation, which deserves to be called a "Great African Moderation".
This paper documents the persistent decline in macroeconomic volatility at the aggregate
and sectoral levels and seeks to provide some explanations. Sectoral analysis shows a particularly
strong reduction of growth volatility in agriculture, followed by services. On the expenditure side,
private consumption and investment growth have stabilized considerably. Analysis of a broad range
of explanatory factors yields that only a small fraction of the Africa Moderation can be explained by
structural change, or changes in major structural characteristics such as institutions, trade intensity,
and diversification, natural resource dependence, or conflict incidence. Rather, this paper brings
forth evidence to suggest that changes in the external environment (terms of trade, external debt),
improved macroeconomic policy frameworks (exchange rate management, fiscal rules), and 'softer'
structural improvements such as the deepening of the financial sector and increases in human capital,
were important towards reducing volatility on the continent.

Experte IfW Kiel

Info

JEL Classification
O11; E30; E60

Schlagworte

  • macroeconomic perspective
  • Makroökonomische Perspektive
  • Makroökonomische Stabilisierung
  • Resilienz
  • Strukturwandel
  • Wirtschaftsstruktur

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