Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?

To my knowledge this study undertakes the first comprehensive and systematic empirical test of the hypothesis that while returns to invested capital in Sub‐Saharan Africa are high compared to select Asian and South American markets, investment rates are low. I investigate three sources: detailed Wor...

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Main Author: Warnholz, J
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: CSAE (University of Oxford) 2008
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author Warnholz, J
author_facet Warnholz, J
author_sort Warnholz, J
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description To my knowledge this study undertakes the first comprehensive and systematic empirical test of the hypothesis that while returns to invested capital in Sub‐Saharan Africa are high compared to select Asian and South American markets, investment rates are low. I investigate three sources: detailed World Bank surveys of 6,500 manufacturing firms, a new panel constructed from financial statements of 6,900 quoted industrials and performance indicators of emerging stock markets. I find returns to be high throughout. Micro‐evidence and sectoral FDI data confirm that investment remains low outside the mining industry and that the link between past profitability and current investment is weak in Africa. Low investment despite high returns poses a puzzle and I evaluate several possible explanations under assumptions of both symmetric and asymmetric information. After allowing for risk premia and other factors, my findings suggest that we observe a temporary disequilibrium, largely due to an information deficit on African markets.
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spelling oxford-uuid:f09f3e3c-679f-4b4b-8851-67ac3fedbd842022-03-27T11:49:39ZIs investment in Africa low despite high profits?Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:f09f3e3c-679f-4b4b-8851-67ac3fedbd84EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsCSAE (University of Oxford)2008Warnholz, JTo my knowledge this study undertakes the first comprehensive and systematic empirical test of the hypothesis that while returns to invested capital in Sub‐Saharan Africa are high compared to select Asian and South American markets, investment rates are low. I investigate three sources: detailed World Bank surveys of 6,500 manufacturing firms, a new panel constructed from financial statements of 6,900 quoted industrials and performance indicators of emerging stock markets. I find returns to be high throughout. Micro‐evidence and sectoral FDI data confirm that investment remains low outside the mining industry and that the link between past profitability and current investment is weak in Africa. Low investment despite high returns poses a puzzle and I evaluate several possible explanations under assumptions of both symmetric and asymmetric information. After allowing for risk premia and other factors, my findings suggest that we observe a temporary disequilibrium, largely due to an information deficit on African markets.
spellingShingle Warnholz, J
Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?
title Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?
title_full Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?
title_fullStr Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?
title_full_unstemmed Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?
title_short Is investment in Africa low despite high profits?
title_sort is investment in africa low despite high profits
work_keys_str_mv AT warnholzj isinvestmentinafricalowdespitehighprofits