Pro-poor and inclusive growth in West Africa

Author:

Adeosun Opeoluwa AdeniyiORCID,Tabash Mosab I.ORCID

Abstract

PurposeThis paper focuses on three key metrics of poverty, income distribution and employment to ascertain the pro-poor and inclusive-growth position of the western African region. The roles of governance structures and their interactive effects are also accommodated to capture the peculiarity of the region.Design/methodology/approachThe paper employs fixed and dynamic models.FindingsEvidence suggests that growth is pro-poor, although virtually all governance indicators are sterile in stimulating poverty reduction. The authors observe that health and education spending coupled with trade-openness stimulate pro-poor growth potentials, whereas conflicts culminate the pervasiveness of poverty in the region. By empirically answering the question of how inclusive is economic growth through the lens of income-distribution and employment, the authors show that growth has been exclusive as per-capita-GDP growth rather dampens income shared by the poorest 20%. Also, it is observed that growth has not been inclusive as the jobless-growth argument remains valid while high inequality further exacerbates unemployment in the region. It is further shown that governance has been generally weak in propelling inclusive growth except where the institutional-component of governance stimulates inclusive growth through improvement in equality and labor employability.Originality/valueThe study jointly examines the metrics of poverty, income distribution and employment to ascertain growth pro-poorness and inclusivity which are key for the achievement of African-union (AU) agenda 2063. The study captures cross-sectional dependence among selected countries which previous studies ignored.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,General Business, Management and Accounting

Reference31 articles.

1. Public investment and inclusive growth in Africa;International Journal of Social Economics,2020

2. Public investment and private sector performance in Nigeria;International Journal of Emerging Markets,2020

3. Policy asymmetries and fiscal sustainability: evidence from Nigeria;African Journal of Economic and Management Studies,2021

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