Foreign aid, workers' remittances and economic growth in Jordan

被引:5
|
作者
Husein, Jamal G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Angelo State Univ, San Angelo, TX 76909 USA
关键词
Cointegration; Foreign aid; Remittances; Economic growth; POLICIES; IMPACT; ASSISTANCE; POVERTY; SAVINGS;
D O I
10.1108/IJSE-06-2018-0293
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the long-run impact of foreign aid and workers' remittances on Jordanian economic growth using time series data for the period 1970-2014. Following the most recent literature, the author also assess whether economic policy enhances economic growth and whether aid effectiveness is conditional on levels of economic policy. Design/methodology/approach The author employs unit root tests that allow for endogenously determined structural breaks (Perron, 1997) and properly utilize the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) or bounds testing approach to cointegration by applying both the F- and the t-test statistics (Pesaran et al., 2001). The analysis is applied to 12 different models that incorporates the various types and sources of foreign aid. Findings Empirical results suggest that aid and its various components, and workers' remittances have had a positive and significant long-run impact on economic growth. Empirical results also show: no evidence supporting the hypothesis that aid is only or more effective in spurring economic growth during periods of "good" macroeconomic policy, i.e., when Jordan has undertaken World Bank Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs); no robust evidence supporting the World Bank's claim that SAPs are growth enhancing. Moreover, the author found strong empirical evidence suggesting that exports and human capital are also major determinants of long-run growth in Jordan. Originality/value Despite receiving a significant amount of foreign aid and labor remittances in the last 50 years, the author found no time series study that tested the long-run impact of these external financing sources on growth in Jordan. This study fills that gap and extends the analysis to test whether macroeconomic policy is growth enhancing and whether aid (and several of its components) are only effective or more effective in promoting growth during periods of "good" macroeconomic policy, i.e., when Jordan has undertaken a World Bank SAP.
引用
收藏
页码:532 / 548
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] POPULATION-GROWTH, ECONOMIC-GROWTH, AND FOREIGN-AID
    SIMON, JL
    CATO JOURNAL, 1987, 7 (01) : 159 - 186
  • [32] Remittances, Institutions, and Economic Growth
    Catrinescu, Natalia
    Leon-Ledesma, Miguel
    Piracha, Matloob
    Quillin, Bryce
    WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 37 (01) : 81 - 92
  • [33] Economic Growth and Foreign Workers in ASEAN and Singapore Comments
    Claus, Iris
    ASIAN ECONOMIC PAPERS, 2012, 11 (03) : 137 - 139
  • [34] Aid, Growth, Remittances and Carbon Emissions in Nepal
    Sharma, Kishor
    Bhattarai, Badri
    Ahmed, Salma
    ENERGY JOURNAL, 2019, 40 (01): : 129 - 141
  • [35] Do happiness and foreign aid affect bilateral migrant remittances?
    Arvin, B. Mak
    Lew, Byron
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC STUDIES, 2012, 39 (02) : 212 - +
  • [36] How foreign aid and remittances affect poverty in MENA countries?
    Khan, Riyazuddin
    Zeeshan
    Haque, Mohammad Imdadul
    Gupta, Neha
    Tausif, Mohammad Rumzi
    Kaushik, Isha
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (01):
  • [37] Foreign aid and entrepreneurship in Africa: the role of remittances and institutional quality
    Ajide, Folorunsho M.
    Osinubi, Tolulope T.
    ECONOMIC CHANGE AND RESTRUCTURING, 2022, 55 (01) : 193 - 224
  • [38] Foreign aid and entrepreneurship in Africa: the role of remittances and institutional quality
    Folorunsho M. Ajide
    Tolulope T. Osinubi
    Economic Change and Restructuring, 2022, 55 : 193 - 224
  • [39] Foreign Aid, FDI and Economic Growth in East European Countries
    Bhandari, Rabindra
    Dhakal, Dharmendra
    Pradhan, Gyan
    Upadhyaya, Kamal
    ECONOMICS BULLETIN, 2007, 6
  • [40] Economic growth and the role of foreign aid in selected African countries
    Wamboye E.
    Adekola A.
    Sergi B.S.
    Development, 2013, 56 (2) : 155 - 171