BOOKS - Empirical Evidence on the Effects of Tax Incentives
US $5.89
871954
871954
Empirical Evidence on the Effects of Tax Incentives
Author: Alexander Klemm
Year: November 30, 2004
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 988 KB
Language: English
Year: November 30, 2004
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 988 KB
Language: English
The growth literature has had problems explaining the and "sub-Saharan African growth dummy and " in cross-country regressions. Instead of taking the usual approach of focusing on long-run growth and assuming that sub-Saharan countries have homogenous parameters in growth regressions, we concentrate our analysis on episodes of growth turnarounds (identifying growth accelerations, decelerations, and collapses) and use only West African countries in our sample. The driving force of growth turnarounds are estimated by analyzing external shocks, political and institutional changes, economic reforms, and indicators particularly relevant to the region. Using probits for a group of 22 Western African economies for the period 1960-2006, we find that growth accelerations are most clearly associated with external shocks, economic liberalization, political stability, and closeness to the coast; decelerations occurred during short-lived regimes and when corruption indices weakened; and collapses are linked to external shocks, falling domestic credit, and proximity to the coast. We then identify policy implications.