CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?

Industrialization of the Chinese economy has made China a formidable force in the global economy. Similarly, Africa has witnessed increased Chinese activity as shown by rising figures in trade with China, Chinese foreign direct investments, Chinese aid and debt to Africa. Despite the rise in Chinese...

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Main Authors: Damiyano D., Mpofu M., Mago S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: iVolga Press 2023-06-01
Series:Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rjoas.com/issue-2023-06/article_01.pdf
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author Damiyano D.
Mpofu M.
Mago S.
author_facet Damiyano D.
Mpofu M.
Mago S.
author_sort Damiyano D.
collection DOAJ
description Industrialization of the Chinese economy has made China a formidable force in the global economy. Similarly, Africa has witnessed increased Chinese activity as shown by rising figures in trade with China, Chinese foreign direct investments, Chinese aid and debt to Africa. Despite the rise in Chinese activities in Africa, there is doubt about the impact of such on growth of African economies. Chinese aid and debt are observed to bear hidden costs that outweigh the benefits. Whereas Chinese trade and investments are claimed to be resource seeking and not genuine. The World Bank also observed that Chinese finance is secretive and does not comply with the best practices of good governance. In this regard, this paper aims to assess the impact of Chinese activities in Southern Africa. The paper uses an explanatory research design. On determining the effect of Chinese activities, we adapt a Solow-growth model. A panel data set is assembled using individual countries’ time series data on the variables of interest. The study uses real GDP growth rate as the dependent variable. The explanatory variables in this paper are GDP per capita, trade with the rest of the world, rest of the world foreign direct investment, Chinese trade, Chinese debt, Chinese FDI, Chinese aid and population growth. Document analysis is the major data collection tool in this paper. Data on Chinese debt, investments, trade and aid is on documents of the Ministry of Commerce of China and John Hopkins University China Africa Research Initiative. Whereas, data on world trade, FDI inflows, population growth, real GDP growth and GDP per capita is on World Bank and IMF public data sets. We use Stata 15 for data analysis. The diagnostic tests showed that we have a problem of heteroscedasticity and auto-correlation. Whereas, the Hausman model choice test showed that the random effects model is the most efficient and consistent than the fixed effects model. We therefore adopt the Feasible Generalised Least Squares regression (FGLS); as this model is robust under autocorrelation and heteroscedasticity. The regression results show that GDP per capita and rest of the word FDI are the only statistically significant explanatory variables at 5% level of significance. All the other variables that is Chinese trade, Chinese debt, Chinese FDI, Chinese aid, population growth and trade with the rest of the world became statistically significant at 10% level. The study recommends that Southern African countries need to establish a thriving democracy and improve the quality of institutions as a way to attract long term investments from the rest of the world. On dealing with China, the paper observes that there is a possibility that all citizens can benefit from Chinese activities and as a region there is need to change the current systems that benefit the political elite and support corruption at the expense of sustainable and inclusive economic development.
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spelling doaj.art-a63ca7f8aec14dfdad1254d1a33194902023-09-04T10:54:16ZengiVolga PressRussian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences2226-11842023-06-01138631110.18551/rjoas.2023-06.01CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?Damiyano D.0Mpofu M.1Mago S.2Department of Development Studies, Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, Nelson Mandela UniversityBindura University of Science EducationDepartment of Development Studies, Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, Nelson Mandela UniversityIndustrialization of the Chinese economy has made China a formidable force in the global economy. Similarly, Africa has witnessed increased Chinese activity as shown by rising figures in trade with China, Chinese foreign direct investments, Chinese aid and debt to Africa. Despite the rise in Chinese activities in Africa, there is doubt about the impact of such on growth of African economies. Chinese aid and debt are observed to bear hidden costs that outweigh the benefits. Whereas Chinese trade and investments are claimed to be resource seeking and not genuine. The World Bank also observed that Chinese finance is secretive and does not comply with the best practices of good governance. In this regard, this paper aims to assess the impact of Chinese activities in Southern Africa. The paper uses an explanatory research design. On determining the effect of Chinese activities, we adapt a Solow-growth model. A panel data set is assembled using individual countries’ time series data on the variables of interest. The study uses real GDP growth rate as the dependent variable. The explanatory variables in this paper are GDP per capita, trade with the rest of the world, rest of the world foreign direct investment, Chinese trade, Chinese debt, Chinese FDI, Chinese aid and population growth. Document analysis is the major data collection tool in this paper. Data on Chinese debt, investments, trade and aid is on documents of the Ministry of Commerce of China and John Hopkins University China Africa Research Initiative. Whereas, data on world trade, FDI inflows, population growth, real GDP growth and GDP per capita is on World Bank and IMF public data sets. We use Stata 15 for data analysis. The diagnostic tests showed that we have a problem of heteroscedasticity and auto-correlation. Whereas, the Hausman model choice test showed that the random effects model is the most efficient and consistent than the fixed effects model. We therefore adopt the Feasible Generalised Least Squares regression (FGLS); as this model is robust under autocorrelation and heteroscedasticity. The regression results show that GDP per capita and rest of the word FDI are the only statistically significant explanatory variables at 5% level of significance. All the other variables that is Chinese trade, Chinese debt, Chinese FDI, Chinese aid, population growth and trade with the rest of the world became statistically significant at 10% level. The study recommends that Southern African countries need to establish a thriving democracy and improve the quality of institutions as a way to attract long term investments from the rest of the world. On dealing with China, the paper observes that there is a possibility that all citizens can benefit from Chinese activities and as a region there is need to change the current systems that benefit the political elite and support corruption at the expense of sustainable and inclusive economic development.http://rjoas.com/issue-2023-06/article_01.pdfchinaeconomic impacteconomic challengecorruptiongdppublic activitysouth africa
spellingShingle Damiyano D.
Mpofu M.
Mago S.
CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?
Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences
china
economic impact
economic challenge
corruption
gdp
public activity
south africa
title CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?
title_full CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?
title_fullStr CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?
title_full_unstemmed CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?
title_short CHINESE’S MESSIAH OR MONSTER ACTIVITIES ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA?
title_sort chinese s messiah or monster activities on economic growth in southern africa
topic china
economic impact
economic challenge
corruption
gdp
public activity
south africa
url http://rjoas.com/issue-2023-06/article_01.pdf
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