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Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa

This study seeks to investigate the relationship between public debt and economic growth in South Africa for the period 1977 – 2019. This study also seeks to review economic theories related to public debt and economic growth namely: Neoclassical, Ricardian and Keynesian theory. To achieve the resea...

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Main Author: Mbali, Andiswa
Other Authors: Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mbali, Andiswa
author2 Alhassan, Abdul Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Mbali, Andiswa
author_facet Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Mbali, Andiswa
author_sort Mbali, Andiswa
collection Thesis
description This study seeks to investigate the relationship between public debt and economic growth in South Africa for the period 1977 – 2019. This study also seeks to review economic theories related to public debt and economic growth namely: Neoclassical, Ricardian and Keynesian theory. To achieve the research objective, this study uses the time series technique, namely, the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) bounds testing approach of cointegration test and the Granger causality approach to test the causal relationship between variables. Analysis of variance decomposition and impulse response functions are used to illustrate the proportions of movements of variables due to its own shock relative to other variables by shocking one standard deviation. The study results indicate there is a positive relationship between public debt and economic growth . However, causality runs from economic growth to public debt. Overall, the study results indicate a significant negative long-run relationship between the public debt and economic growth when inflation and gross capital formation are used as controlled variables. However, the relationship is significant in the short run. The impulse response function indicated that there is responsiveness in public debt and GDP growth to shocks of public debt and GDP growth. However, the result of variance decomposition test in explaining the GDP growth and public debt co-movement. In the short run, self-variance of GDP growth comovement is almost 100%, which reduces to 91.79% percent in the long term. Aside from selfvariation, public debt induced no notable variation in bilateral co-movement in short term. In the long-run however, maximum variation of 8.22% is provided by public debt. The above statistics suggest that shock in economic growth accounts for 91.78% fluctuations. A shock to public debt causes fluctuations to GDP growth significantly over time. Last, as a policy recommendation, South Africa needs undertake aggressive economic strategies with clear objectives and strong commitments, driven by accountable bureaucrats to ensure that public funds are used efficiently. Public debt also needs to be directed through economic growth driven projects and productive expenditures.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:38.153Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35872 Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa Mbali, Andiswa Alhassan, Abdul Latif Jantjies, Dumisani business This study seeks to investigate the relationship between public debt and economic growth in South Africa for the period 1977 – 2019. This study also seeks to review economic theories related to public debt and economic growth namely: Neoclassical, Ricardian and Keynesian theory. To achieve the research objective, this study uses the time series technique, namely, the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) bounds testing approach of cointegration test and the Granger causality approach to test the causal relationship between variables. Analysis of variance decomposition and impulse response functions are used to illustrate the proportions of movements of variables due to its own shock relative to other variables by shocking one standard deviation. The study results indicate there is a positive relationship between public debt and economic growth . However, causality runs from economic growth to public debt. Overall, the study results indicate a significant negative long-run relationship between the public debt and economic growth when inflation and gross capital formation are used as controlled variables. However, the relationship is significant in the short run. The impulse response function indicated that there is responsiveness in public debt and GDP growth to shocks of public debt and GDP growth. However, the result of variance decomposition test in explaining the GDP growth and public debt co-movement. In the short run, self-variance of GDP growth comovement is almost 100%, which reduces to 91.79% percent in the long term. Aside from selfvariation, public debt induced no notable variation in bilateral co-movement in short term. In the long-run however, maximum variation of 8.22% is provided by public debt. The above statistics suggest that shock in economic growth accounts for 91.78% fluctuations. A shock to public debt causes fluctuations to GDP growth significantly over time. Last, as a policy recommendation, South Africa needs undertake aggressive economic strategies with clear objectives and strong commitments, driven by accountable bureaucrats to ensure that public funds are used efficiently. Public debt also needs to be directed through economic growth driven projects and productive expenditures. 2022-03-01T16:58:20Z 2022-03-01T16:58:20Z 2021 2022-03-01T16:56:55Z Master Thesis Masters MBA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35872 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle business
Mbali, Andiswa
Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa
title_full Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa
title_fullStr Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa
title_short Public debt and economic growth: empirical evidence from South Africa
title_sort public debt and economic growth empirical evidence from south africa
topic business
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35872
work_keys_str_mv AT mbaliandiswa publicdebtandeconomicgrowthempiricalevidencefromsouthafrica