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Cross-border bank lending versus FDI in Africa

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Jose Brambila Macias Isabella Massa Victor Murinde. University of Reading Overseas Development Institute Birmingham Business School ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cross-border bank lending versus FDI in Africa


1
Cross-border bank lending versus FDI in Africas
growth story
Jose Brambila Macias Isabella Massa
Victor Murinde
University of Reading Overseas Development
Institute Birmingham Business School
African Economic Conference 2009 Addis
Ababa, 11-13 November 2009
2
Outline
  • Stylized Facts
  • Methodology and data
  • Results
  • Conclusions and policy recommendations.

3
Stylized Facts
  • Arguably, FDI and cross-border bank lending are
    the two main types of private capital flows for
    many African countries.
  • They are distributed heterogeneously within the
    African region
  • - SANE and resource-intensive countries are the
    main FDI recipients
  • - in 2007 SANE attracted 45 and APPA countries
    60 of banks total international claims on
    African countries.
  • FDI and cross-border bank lending have been
    found to be the main drivers of growth among
    private capital flows in SSA (Brambila Macias and
    Massa, 2009).
  • African countries have different degree of trade
    openness.
  • Financial sector reforms have been introduced in
    a heterogeneous way and through different paths
    over time in Africa (Murinde, 2009).

4
Objectives
  • We extend Brambila Macias-Massa paper by
    investigating the relative long-run growth impact
    of FDI and cross-border bank lending in a larger
    sample of African countries.
  • We investigate the impact of trade openness and
    financial sector reforms on Africas growth.
  • We investigate these relationships by
    distinguishing between four country groups
  • 1. All African countries
  • 2. All African countries except SANE
  • 3. Oil-countries
  • 4. Non-oil countries.

5
Methodology Data
  • We use GMM Panel Data Techniques
  • where
  • is real per capita income
  • include trade openness, government
    consumption, inflation rate, financial sector
    reforms proxy.
  • The whole sample includes 43 African countries,
    and has been split into three sub-samples (i)
    all African countries except SANE (ii) APPA
    countries (iii) all countries outside the APPA.
  • Time horizon 1995-2007.
  • Data sources UNCTADs FDI On-line database, BIS
    Consolidated Banking Statistics, World Banks
    WDI, IMFs IFS, Heritage Foundation.

6
Descriptive Statistics
  • Real output per capita is higher in APPA
    countries, which also include SANE.
  • APPA countries are on average the main FDI
    recipients.
  • Cross-border bank lending on average is lower in
    APPA countries than in non-APPA countries.
  • Trade openness on average is quite high in the
    whole sample and slightly higher in oil countries
    than in non-oil countries.
  • Non-APPA countries score higher in terms of
    financial reforms than APPA countries.
  • Government consumption is a bit higher in
    non-APPA countries.
  • Inflation on average is high in the whole sample
    and in particular in APPA countries.

7
Correlation Matrix
  • FDI, international bank lending, trade, reforms
    are positively correlated with economic growth.
  • FDI and trade have the highest correlation with
    growth.
  • Government consumption and inflation are
    negatively correlated with growth.

8
Dynamic Panel (GMM) Results
9
Results
  • FDI has a significant positive growth impact in
    the whole sample and especially in APPA
    countries.
  • Cross-border bank lending has a positive growth
    impact in the whole sample
  • But is significant and negative in oil-countries
    where weak institutions (resource curse) leave
    these countries exposed to international banking
    risks in the long-run.
  • As expected, inflation has a negative impact on
    growth while trade openness is equally important
    for growth for all African economies.
  • Government consumption play a negative role in
    non-oil countries while it has a positive growth
    impact in oil countries. Mixed evidence in the
    whole sample.
  • Reforms appear not to play a major role in
    fostering growth in the whole sample and in the
    sample excluding SANE.
  • But they play a significant and positive role in
    non-oil countries.

10
Conclusions
  • FDI has a significant and positive impact on
    Africas growth, especially in SANE and
    oil-countries.
  • Cross-border bank lending has a significant
    positive effect on growth of the whole African
    region, but a negative growth impact in oil
    countries.
  • FDI has a larger impact than cross-border bank
    lending on Africas growth.
  • A slim and efficient government as well as
    financial reforms are drivers of growth in
    non-oil countries but not in oil countries.
  • Trade openness has a positive impact on all
    African countries economic growth.

11
Policy implications
  • Overall, FDI and cross-border bank lending have
    the potential to help the African region to
    overcome the current growth impasse caused by the
    global financial crisis.
  • African countries should continue to improve the
    investment environment in order to continue to
    attract FDI.
  • Oil countries should make an effort to undertake
    more financial reforms especially in order to
    offset in the long-run the potential negative
    growth impact of cross-border bank lending.
  • Adequate fiscal and monetary policies should
    continue to be the rule, rather than the
    exception, in order to keep inflation below the
    international threshold levels of 11-12.

12
Ideas for further research
  • To extend the current model to include human
    capital.
  • To test the robustness of our results in the
    presence of other relevant financial flows for
    Africa such as remittances and aid.
  • To assess the growth versus stability effects of
    FDI and international bank lending.

13
Thank you J.BrambilaMacias_at_reading.ac.uk
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