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Infrastructure Development as a Prerequisite for Structural Change in Africa

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Abstract

Structural change is seen by development economics theorists as a driver of sustained and sustainable economic growth. African countries that have understood this prioritize structural change policies in their national development programs in order to reduce poverty and promote employment through commodity-based industrialization. How does infrastructure development contribute to this process? The purpose of this paper is to answer this question by examining empirically whether the state of infrastructure development in Africa stimulates structural change, understood as the development of the manufacturing sector. After outlining the state of infrastructure quality in the region, and discussing some theoretical channels through which this relationship might pass, we estimate fixed effects models from 52 African countries over the period 2003–2018. Results suggest that structural change in Africa is optimized with the development of infrastructure, particularly energy and information and communication technologies. These results are robust to the control of institutional dynamics, the natural resource curse hypothesis, the likely attrition bias, and the use of alternative measures of structural change and infrastructure quality. Among other policy implications arising from these findings, the establishment of partnership projects with other developed countries and the promotion of public–private partnerships.

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Notes

  1. The list of countries in the study is presented in Table 6 of the Appendix.

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Correspondence to Yselle F. Malah Kuete.

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Appendix

Appendix

Table 6 List of countries of the study
Table 7 Definitions of variables and data sources
Table 8 Results of the Hausman test

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Malah Kuete, Y.F., Asongu, S.A. Infrastructure Development as a Prerequisite for Structural Change in Africa. J Knowl Econ 14, 1386–1412 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13132-022-00989-w

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