Spillovers From the Rest of the World Into Sub-Saharan African Countries
This paper investigates the impact of a global slowdown on individual African countries using a series of dynamic panel regressions for countries in the region, relating real growth in domestic output to world growth in trade weighted by partner countries and several control variables: oil prices, non-oil prices, financial variables, and country fixed effects. Estimates are then applied to prepare country-specific simulations. The model, which is shown to estimate well out-of-sample spillover effects in the region, shows that countries in the region are significantly affected by lower external demand for their exports, declines in commodity prices and the terms of trade, and tighter financial conditions abroad. The last, proxied by the spread of three-month Libor to US treasury bills, is to our knowledge one of the first applications of such a measure of financial conditions for countries in the region.
Year of publication: |
2009-07-01
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Commodity prices | Economic growth | Economic models | External shocks | Oil prices | Terms of trade | world growth | gdp growth | growth rate | real gdp | trading partners | partner countries | trading partner | export prices | terms of trade shocks | oil exporters | growth rates | trade shocks | trade changes | political economy | gdp growth rate | world markets | oil imports | idiosyncratic shocks | price of imports | growth model | world economy | trade effects | gdp per capita | oil importers | trade partner | exchange rate regime | idiosyncratic factors | trade shock | commodity trade | net exports | business cycle | terms of trade effects | economic integration | business cycles |
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