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【The World Economy】Structural change and trade openness in sub- Saharan African countries

2022-07-15

Structural change and trade openness in sub-Saharan African countries

Kabinet Kaba1, Justin Yifu Lin2, Mary-Françoise Renard3

1CNRS, IRD, CERDI, Clermont Ferrand, France

2Institute of New Structural Economics, Institute of South- South Cooperation and Development, School of National Development, Peking University, Beijing, China

3School of Economics, CERDI- IDREC, University Clermont Auvergne, Clermont- Ferrand, France

 

Correspondence

Kabinet Kaba, CNRS, IRD, CERDI,  

F-63000 Clermont Ferrand, France. Email: kabinet.kaba@uca.fr

 

Abstract

In this paper, we study the role of trade openness in the economic reallocation from the agriculture to the manufacturing sector in 34 sub-Saharan African countries between 1970 and 2016. The results show that the long-term evolution of trade openness negatively impacts the long-run and the short-run dynamics of structural change. Moreover, this impact goes through aggregate exports not aggregate imports. By breaking down global exports, we find that commodities exports have a negative impact while manufacturing exports positively impact structural change. These results are explained by the fact that, contrary to Asian countries, African countries have failed to put trade at the service of industrialisation by following the logic of comparative advantage. More precisely, they have failed to invest the revenues from commodities exports to improve the quality of infrastructure in order to remove the constraints on the economic relocation to labour-intensive manufacturing activities. Unlike previous studies, we address the endogeneity problem by using a dynamic ordinary least squares method after a pooled mean group method.

 

Keywords

Africa, Asia, comparative advantage, industrialisation, infrastructure, state, structural change, trade openness

 

Article link 

https://doi.org/10.1111/twec.13261