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Most studies treat aid flows as a unitary concept with a standard result that aid does not affect long-run economic growth or development. This chapter argues that the standard finding may be misleading if different types of aid have different effects. To alleviate this problem, I use factor...
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This paper outlines how inflows of foreign aid might push up the real price of investments and thus crowd out private investments. The main implication - that aid leads to increasing real investment prices - finds substantial support in panel estimates from 78 developing countries. The effects...
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Hopes for development aid remain high among Western politicians and pundits, but the evidence is depressing. Foreign aid has on average probably no effect on long-run growth. To understand the failure of many development projects, we need a deeper consideration of the failure of top-down...
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Foreign aid is given for many purposes and different intentions, yet most studies treat aid flows as a unitary concept. This paper uses factor analysis to separate aid flows into different types. The main types can be interpreted as aid for economic purposes, social purposes, and reconstruction;...
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