Title: Foreign aid towards accelerated economic growth in Africa: the role of independent central banks, political institutions and monetary integration

Authors: Abel Mawuko Agoba; Odunayo Magret Olarewaju

Addresses: Leeds Business School, Leeds Beckett University, UK ' Coventry Business School, Coventry University, UK

Abstract: We explore the impact of various dimensions of foreign aid and central bank independence (CBI) on economic growth in Africa. The aim is to highlight which types of aid and central bank reforms will be most beneficial for Africa. The study also examines the impact of monetary integration on aid and CBI's effectiveness. We achieve these using two stage GMM and error correction two stage least squares estimators with data spanning 1970-2017. We find that, aside economic, infrastructure and services aid, other forms of aid had a direct negative impact on economic growth. Goal, personal, instrument and financial independence did not have any significant impact on economic growth. CBI does not enhance the impact of foreign aid on economic growth except in the presence of high levels of political institutional quality. Financial independence had the strongest impact on enhancing aid effectiveness. Foreign aid has a stronger impact in fixed exchange regimes. CBI impacts economic growth more in the non-CFA Zone, reflecting the role of flexible exchange regimes in improving CBI effectiveness.

Keywords: foreign aid effectiveness; central bank independence; CBI; economic growth; monetary integration; institutions; developing countries; Africa.

DOI: 10.1504/AJESD.2025.143057

African Journal of Economic and Sustainable Development, 2025 Vol.10 No.1, pp.41 - 71

Received: 14 Jan 2024
Accepted: 24 Mar 2024

Published online: 02 Dec 2024 *

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