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Capital Accumulation in Eastern and Southern Africa PDF

100 Pages·2003·2.83 MB·English
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dd ee zz riri oo SWP562 hh utut AA e e rr uu ss oo clcl ss DiDi c c Capital Accumulation in Eastern and Southern Africa blibli uu PP A Decade of Setbacks dd Ravi Gulhati ee rizriz Gautam Datta oo hh utut AA e e rr uu ss cloclo WORLD BANK STAFF WORKING PAPERS ss DiDi Number 562 c c blibli uu PP dd ee zz riri oo hh utut AA e e rr uu ss oo clcl ss DiDi c c blibli uu PP dd ee zz riri oo hh utut AA e e rr uu ss oo clcl ss DiDi c c blibli uu PP /-/- MV/5- WORLD BANK STAFF WORKING PAPERS Number 562 57 4u J 7 Capital Accumulation in Eastern and Southern Africa A Decade of Setbacks Ravi Gulhatia Gautam Datta The World Bank Washington, D.C., U.S.A. Copyright © 1983 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. First printing April 1983 All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America This is a working document published informally by the World Bank. To present the results of research with the least possible delay, the typescript has not been prepared in accordance with the procedures appropriate to formal printed texts, and the World Bank accepts no responsibility for errors. The publication is supplied at a token charge to defray part of the cost of manufacture and distribution. The views and interpretations in this document are those of the author(s) and should not be attributed to the World Bank, to its affiliated organizations, or to any individual acting on their behalf. Any maps used have been prepared solely for the convenience of the readers; the denominations used and the boundaries shown do not imply, on the part of the World Bank and its affiliates, any judgment on the legal status of any territory or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. The full range of World Bank publications is described in the Catalog of World Bank Publications; the continuing research program of the Bank is outlined in World Bank Research Program: Abstracts of Current Studies. Both booklets are updated annually; the most recent edition of each is available without charge from the Publications Distribution Unit of the Bank in Washington or from the European Office of the Bank, 66, avenue d'Iena, 75116 Paris, France. Ravi Gulhait is the chief economist of the Eastern Africa Regional Office of the World Bank; Gautam Datta is a consultant to the World Bank. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Gulhati, Ravi. Capital accumulation in eastern and southern Africa. (World Bank staff working papers ; no. 562) Bibliography: p.'' 1. Saving and' investment--Africa, Eastern. 2. Saving and investment--Africa, Southern. 3. Capital producti- vity--Africa, East'ern. 4. Capital productivity--Africa, Southern'. I. Datta, Gutam, 1947- . II. Title. III. Series. RC860.Z9S34 1983 332'.0415'09676 83-5899 ISBN 0-8213-0169-1 ABSTRACT The paper attempts to analyze the magnitude of the setback in capital accumulation in Eastern and Southern Africa and the proximate causes of this phenomenon. The sample consists of 16 countries and available data for the late 1960s and 1970s are explored. Given the weakness of the statistics, the authors rely more on expert observations than on rigorous quantitative assessments; although available data are analysed. Capital formation increased fairly rapidly during 19 67-1974 but then slowed down considerably. Investment was financed to a considerable extent by external concessional assistance; rapid growth in such funds during the late 1970s helped offset declining national savings rates to some extent. The setback in investment rates was greatly accentuated by a large and widespread deterioration in the productivity of capital brought about by the impact of government policy, strained absorptive capacity and a variety of exogenous factors. -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful to Ram Agarwala, Rolf Gusten, Robert Armstrong and Peter Hansen for valuable comments on an earlier draft of this paper. CONTENTS Section Page No. I. Introduction . .................................... 1 II. First, A Look At the Record ....................... 4 III. Behavior of Investment ............................ 10 IV. Productivity of Capital ........................... 23 Capacity Utilization 24 Sector-Mix and Sectoral ICORs 28 Absorptive Capacity 30 Impact of Government Policy 31 V. Conclusion ......................................... 34 Figures Figure 1. The Investment Ratio and GDP Per Capita ....... 13 Figure 2. The Median Ratios of Savings and Investment to GDP, Eastern Africa ..... 16 Figure 3. The Savings Ratio and GDP Per Capita .......... 18 Figure 4. The Savings Ratio and Terms of Trade, Zambia and Zaire ..................................... 20 Figure 5. The Savings Ratio and Terms of Trade, Ethiopia and Uganda .................................... 21 Page No. Annex I - Statistical Tables Table 1 The Growth of GDP in Constant Prices, Eastern Africa and Comparator Countries, 1960-70 and 1970-79 ................................................ 38 Table 2 The Growth of GDP in Constant Prices, 1967-78 and Sub-Periods 1967-73 and 1973-78 ..................... 39 Table 3 The Growth of Gross Domestic Investment in Constant Prices, Eastern Africa and Comparator Countries, 1960-70 and 1970-79 ................................... 40 Table 4 The Growth of Gross Domestic Investment in Constant Prices, 1967-78 and Sub-Periods 1967-73 and 1973-78 .... 41 Table 5 The Incremental Capital Output Ratio In The Periods 1961-68, 1967-73 and 1973-79 .......................... 42 Table 6 Incremental Gross Capital Output Ratios in Five Developed Countries, 1967 to 1974 ...................... 43 Table 7 Historical Incremental Capital Output Ratios In Developed Countries ................................... 44 Table 8 The Ratio of Gross Domestic Investment to GDP, 1967-78. Three-Year Moving Averages ................... 45 Table 9 Index of Real Gross Fixed Capital Formation By the Central Government .................................... 46 Table 10 The Ratio of Gross National Savings to GDP. Three-Year Moving Averages, 1967-78 .... ............... 47 Table 11 Terms of Trade Estimates, 1967 to 1978. Three-Year Moving Averages ........................................ 48 Table 12 Gross National Savings as a Percentage of Gross National Investment. Three-Year Moving Averages, 1967-78 .... ... 49 Table 13 Net Official Development Assistance as a Percentage of External Resources Inflow ........................... 50 Table 14 Direct Investment as a Proportion of Long-Term Capital Inflows ................................................ 51 Table 15 New Private Direct Investment From DAC Sources .... .....5 2 Page No. Annex I - Statistical Tables (Cont'd) Table 16 The Stock of Foreign Direct Investment in Eastern Africa, End 1978 ............................... 53 Table 17 Gross Eurocurrency Credit to Eastern Africa .... ........ 54 Table 18 Capacity Utilization in Selected Sectors in Tanzania, 1978-79 ...................................... 55 Table 19 Capacity Utilization in a Sample of Parastatal Firms in Tanzania, 1979 ...................................... 56 Table 20 Capacity Utilization in a Single of Public Enterprises, 1976-78, Somalia .......................... 57 Table 21 Capacity Utilization in Certain Manufacturing Firms in Sudan, 1973 ......................................... 58 Table 22 Capacity Utilization in the Public Industrial Sector in Sudan, 1975-76 ...................................... 59 Table 23 Frequency Distribution of Capacity Utilization in Plants/Processes of the INDECO Group, Zambia, 1981-82 .. 60 Table 24 Quantum Index of Imports, 1967 to 1978 .... ............. 61 Table 25 Petroleum Imports Into Eastern Africa. Three-Year Moving Averages ........................................ 62 Table 26 Public Current Expenditure Per Pupil in Constant Prices At The First Level (Ages 7 to 13) .... ........... 63 Table 27 Share of Public Investment (Including Parastatal Investment) in Total (Three-Year Moving Averages) ....... 64 Table 28 Index of Real Recurrent Expenditure on Economic Services In Four Eastern African Countries ...................... 65 Annex II Interrelations between the ICOR, Growth Rate, Invest- ment Ratio and the Investment Rate ..................... 66 Annex III Limitations of National Account Data in Eastern Africa 71 References ........... ............................................ 71

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The 1970s was a disappointing decade for the economic development of. Sub-Saharan Africa and Reddaway, 1962). In the Eastern Africa Africa countries, the growth rate was higher than in India or Pakistan. Counterbalancing
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