Affiliation:
1. School of Economics University of Johannesburg Johannesburg South Africa
2. Department of Economics University of Tashkent for Applied Sciences Tashkent Uzbekistan
3. Saint‐Louis Economics Research Laboratory, Faculty of Economics and Management Gaston Berger University Saint‐Louis Senegal
Abstract
AbstractThe paper aims to investigate the legitimacy of the African Union by examining the socio‐demographic determinants of citizens' support of African integration. To do this, we use Rounds 4, 5, 6, and 8 of the Afrobarometer survey data corresponding to more than 110,000 respondents. Using logistics regressions, we find that individual characteristics such as living area, education, employment status, political membership, freedom, living conditions, and Living Poverty Index (LPI) are significantly related to the probability of supporting African integration. The findings are largely robust to dynamics of regional integration, the African Union, and Regional Economic Communities (RECs). Thus, since African citizens' trust in the unification could be considered a condition of legitimacy in the process, our results suggest that more efforts should be made to gain credibility, especially as it pertains to the benefits of African integration.