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Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa

This study examines the interrelationship between governance, democracy, resource dependency, and human development in Africa. Specifically, the Human Development Index (HDI) and six governance indicators from the WGI database are employed to estimate a dynamic panel model on forty-eight sub-Sahara...

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Main Author: Fellingham, Stacey Joy
Other Authors: Alhassan, Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fellingham, Stacey Joy
author2 Alhassan, Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Latif
Fellingham, Stacey Joy
author_facet Alhassan, Latif
Fellingham, Stacey Joy
author_sort Fellingham, Stacey Joy
collection Thesis
description This study examines the interrelationship between governance, democracy, resource dependency, and human development in Africa. Specifically, the Human Development Index (HDI) and six governance indicators from the WGI database are employed to estimate a dynamic panel model on forty-eight sub-Sahara African countries throughout 1996 to 2019 using the Generalised Method of Moments (GMM) technique. The empirical analysis reveals a positive association between all six governance indicators and human development. ‘Voice and accountability', and ‘control of corruption', evidence a strong association with growth in human development followed by government effectiveness, rule of law, regulatory quality, and political stability. Interaction terms demonstrate that democratisation is essential to unlocking the benefits of the governance indicators on human development. The effects of the resource dependence on the interaction between governance and human development are less obvious than democratisation, likely due to the volatile nature of commodity prices which may only have short-term impacts. From the findings, this study recommends that human development will likely be fostered through support of the democratisation process. To drive democratisation, sub-Saharan states should consider diversifying their economies and adopting policies that reduce economic inequality
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:57.504Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr 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:11427/39214 Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa Fellingham, Stacey Joy Alhassan, Latif Gossel Sean development finance This study examines the interrelationship between governance, democracy, resource dependency, and human development in Africa. Specifically, the Human Development Index (HDI) and six governance indicators from the WGI database are employed to estimate a dynamic panel model on forty-eight sub-Sahara African countries throughout 1996 to 2019 using the Generalised Method of Moments (GMM) technique. The empirical analysis reveals a positive association between all six governance indicators and human development. ‘Voice and accountability', and ‘control of corruption', evidence a strong association with growth in human development followed by government effectiveness, rule of law, regulatory quality, and political stability. Interaction terms demonstrate that democratisation is essential to unlocking the benefits of the governance indicators on human development. The effects of the resource dependence on the interaction between governance and human development are less obvious than democratisation, likely due to the volatile nature of commodity prices which may only have short-term impacts. From the findings, this study recommends that human development will likely be fostered through support of the democratisation process. To drive democratisation, sub-Saharan states should consider diversifying their economies and adopting policies that reduce economic inequality 2024-03-08T08:13:53Z 2024-03-08T08:13:53Z 2022 2023-11-01T09:12:16Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCOM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39214 Eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle development finance
Fellingham, Stacey Joy
Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_full Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_fullStr Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_short Governance and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_sort governance and human development in sub saharan africa
topic development finance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39214
work_keys_str_mv AT fellinghamstaceyjoy governanceandhumandevelopmentinsubsaharanafrica