Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola

An increasing number of papers in the literature use satellite data on nighttime lights as a proxy for economic activities, such as GDP or GDP growth. They implicitly assume that the relationship between GDP and nighttime lights works through the demand side, and there is no constraint on the supply...

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Main Authors: Zhang, Q, Cust, J
Format: Working paper
Published: University of Oxford 2016
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author Zhang, Q
Cust, J
author_facet Zhang, Q
Cust, J
author_sort Zhang, Q
collection OXFORD
description An increasing number of papers in the literature use satellite data on nighttime lights as a proxy for economic activities, such as GDP or GDP growth. They implicitly assume that the relationship between GDP and nighttime lights works through the demand side, and there is no constraint on the supply of electricity. This paper first points out a paradox in using this method: the countries for which the method is needed the most, i.e. the countries with poor statistical capacity, are just the countries, for which the assumption of the method is satisfied the least, i.e. the countries with a large power infrastructure deficit. Motivated by this, we collected the data on power infrastructure investment in Angola, a country with a large power infrastructure funding gap. Indeed, we find that in the case of Angola the stable relationship between GDP growth and lights growth assumed in the literature is broken. Instead,increase in lights strongly co-moved with increase in power infrastructure investment. The strong link between lights and investment enables us to develop a new method of quantitatively evaluating value-for-money for infrastructure investments, which directly estimates the cost-effectiveness of transforming investment to welfare, as measured by lights. We estimate the overall cost-effectiveness, and the cost-effectiveness of different financing methods in the case of Angola.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a53cb06f-ef62-44c0-ac49-f6d3a34f1a822022-03-27T02:39:05ZNighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from AngolaWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:a53cb06f-ef62-44c0-ac49-f6d3a34f1a82Symplectic ElementsBulk import via SwordUniversity of Oxford2016Zhang, QCust, JAn increasing number of papers in the literature use satellite data on nighttime lights as a proxy for economic activities, such as GDP or GDP growth. They implicitly assume that the relationship between GDP and nighttime lights works through the demand side, and there is no constraint on the supply of electricity. This paper first points out a paradox in using this method: the countries for which the method is needed the most, i.e. the countries with poor statistical capacity, are just the countries, for which the assumption of the method is satisfied the least, i.e. the countries with a large power infrastructure deficit. Motivated by this, we collected the data on power infrastructure investment in Angola, a country with a large power infrastructure funding gap. Indeed, we find that in the case of Angola the stable relationship between GDP growth and lights growth assumed in the literature is broken. Instead,increase in lights strongly co-moved with increase in power infrastructure investment. The strong link between lights and investment enables us to develop a new method of quantitatively evaluating value-for-money for infrastructure investments, which directly estimates the cost-effectiveness of transforming investment to welfare, as measured by lights. We estimate the overall cost-effectiveness, and the cost-effectiveness of different financing methods in the case of Angola.
spellingShingle Zhang, Q
Cust, J
Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola
title Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola
title_full Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola
title_fullStr Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola
title_full_unstemmed Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola
title_short Nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment: evidence from Angola
title_sort nighttime lights and power infrastructure investment evidence from angola
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangq nighttimelightsandpowerinfrastructureinvestmentevidencefromangola
AT custj nighttimelightsandpowerinfrastructureinvestmentevidencefromangola