Does foreign aid with political strings dampen or heighten growth? An analysis of aid-growth nexus in Pakistan
Journal Title: Pakistan Journal of Economic Studies - Year 2021, Vol 4, Issue 1
Abstract
Pakistan has received around 1.3 billion dollars (current US$) on an annual basis from 1972 to 2014 in the form of bilateral and multilateral aid. While Pakistan’s per capita GDP (current US$) rose from 152 US$ in 1972 to 1,315 US$ in 2014, the world per capita GDP increased from 979US$ to 10,755 US$ in the same period. A lot of empirical evidence suggests that the aid coming from the countries that attach political and strategic strings with the aid fails to contribute to economic growth significantly. Using data for the sample period 1972 – 2014 and employing the Vector Error Correction (VECM) estimation method, we find that aggregate official development aid has a significant and positive long-run impact on the GDP per capita. A 1% rise in aggregated Official Development Assistance increases Pakistan’s GDP per capita by 0.75%. We also find that bilateral aid from very few countries such as Belgium, UK, and the US has a significant long-term impact on Pakistan’s GDP. Additionally, we fail to accept the hypothesis that aid coming from some countries with political and geostrategic strings has any adverse impact on the GDP per capita of Pakistan in the long run. Regarding the impact of different components of aggregate aid on Pakistan’s GDP per capita, we see mixed effects. The results show that a 1 % increase in both Official Development Assistance (ODA) and technical cooperation decreases GDP per capita by 1.55% and 1.063%, respectively. Conversely, a one percent increase in grants leads to an increase of 2.71% in Pakistan GDP per capita in the long run. As Pakistan’s economic problems have considerably deepened in recent years because of a variety of factors including Covid-19, Pakistan has been actively looking for economic bailouts from the IMF and other bilateral partners. This study is expected to provide important insights regarding the components of aid and their implications for economic growth.
Authors and Affiliations
Muhammad Imran Javed, Rafi Amir-ud-Din
Economic and Strategic Implications of Privatization in Pakistan: Case Study of Pakistan Steel Mill
Privatization started in the 1980s in Pakistan, but it failed to turn state-owned enterprises into profitable entities, improve efficiency, ensure better governance, retire debt, and fix the fiscal balanci...
Impact of infrastructural inefficiency on the citizens of Karachi(A case of green line bus project of Karachi)
The object on this project is to capture impact the infrastructural inefficiencies on the daily route on the public. In order to execute our research we have selected one of the recently on-going projects of “Green Line...
Mapping the Causal Connections betweenExchange Rate Fluctuations and AgricultureProduction: New Evidence fromPakistanUtilizing CointegrationAnalysis
This study is on the foreign exchange rate and export sector and its impact on macroeconomic variables. The objective is to research the experiential association between the rate of exchange and the...
Causal Economic Interactions between CO2 Emissions and Economic Growth
The environmental penalties of trade openness and foreign direct investment (FDI) got significant consideration in the current era. In this article, we aim to explore the impact of causal interactions of CO2 emission wit...
Stagnate Economic Analysis of Regime Change & Administration shuffling Impact on Pakistan economy
Pakistan has faced a political instability since its creation. The country remains under the undemocratic dictatorship of Military rulers for more than three decades. This has made it difficult to strengthen the democrat...