Institutional Quality and Economic Growth: Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa

Adedotun Seyingbo, Oluwatosin Adeniyi

Abstract


The paper investigated the relationship between institutional quality and economic
growth in a sample of Sub-Saharan African (SSA) economies. Deploying data
spanning 1996 to 2013 on these 28 countries, and an assortment of panel estimation
techniques, a number of findings ensued. The System GMM estimation technique as
well as the other approaches suggested substantial evidence that institutional quality
had trifling effect on economic growth in SSA. This result surprisingly remained
robust to the six alternative measures of institutional quality adopted with a view to
capturing the diversity of governance dimensions. Plausible explanations could be
envisaged particularly owing to the use of a dynamic panel estimator and the
reckoning that growth performance in the region has rather been more significantly
influenced by other covariates especially investment and human capital. Therefore it
becomes imperative to put in place institutional reforms in these SSA countries. This
is in order to allow the rule of law to prevail, engender effective regulation of markets,
promote control of corruption, and ensure the effectiveness of government institutions.
Put together, these will go a long way in guaranteeing sustained growth performance.

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