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<title>ALTERNATIVE PUBLIC FINANCING OPTIONS, TAX AND ECONOMIC GROWTH NEXUS IN THREE SELECTED SUBSAHARAN AFRICAN COUNTRIES, 1990-2016</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2217</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-04T06:31:58Z</dc:date>
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<title>ALTERNATIVE PUBLIC FINANCING OPTIONS, TAX AND ECONOMIC GROWTH NEXUS IN THREE SELECTED SUBSAHARAN AFRICAN COUNTRIES, 1990-2016</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2218</link>
<description>ALTERNATIVE PUBLIC FINANCING OPTIONS, TAX AND ECONOMIC GROWTH NEXUS IN THREE SELECTED SUBSAHARAN AFRICAN COUNTRIES, 1990-2016
ADEDEJI, Abdulfatai Adekunle
The effectiveness of tax in inducing economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)&#13;
countries remained unclear. Countries with comparable chequered economic growth&#13;
rates had varying levels of Tax-to-GDP Ratios (TGDPRs). South Africa, Nigeria, and&#13;
Republic of the Congo are three prominent SSA countries with unstable growth rates.&#13;
With TGDPRs of 24.8% and 9.1%, respectively, South Africa and Republic of Congo&#13;
experienced growth rates that rose from -0.3% and 1.0% in 1990 to 5.3% and 6.4% in&#13;
2005 before falling to 0.4% and -2.8% in 2016. Nigeria had a TGDPR of 7.6%, and its&#13;
growth rate dropped from 11.8% in 1990 to 5.3% in 2005 and further to -1.6% in 2016.&#13;
These countries also used Alternative Public Financing Options (APFOs) such as Public&#13;
Debt (PD), seigniorage, and Total Natural Resource Rents (TNRR), which could shape&#13;
the tax-growth nexus pattern. Existing studies had focused primarily on the tax-growth&#13;
nexus in SSA but paid little attention to the influence of APFOs. This study was,&#13;
therefore, designed to examine the effect of APFOs on tax-growth nexus in three&#13;
selected SSA countries.&#13;
The Endogenous Growth Theory provided the framework. A Two-Stage Least Squares&#13;
method was deployed to address potential endogeneity issues among the variables. The&#13;
method allowed for the interaction of APFOs in the tax-growth nexus, such that high PD&#13;
accumulation could reduce tax revenue necessary to facilitate growth, and high reliance&#13;
on seigniorage and TNRR could stifle tax mobilisation efforts and lead to low growth.&#13;
A simulation was used to investigate how APFOs might affect the tax-growth nexus.&#13;
The data which covered 1990 to 2016 were sourced from the World Development&#13;
Indicators, International Centre for Tax and Development, and the Monetary Authorities&#13;
database of the three countries. All estimates were validated at α≤0.05.&#13;
Tax and PD interaction had significant negative effect on growth in South Africa (-&#13;
0.004, p=0.01), Nigeria (-0.002, p=0.01) and Republic of Congo (-0.002, p=0.01),&#13;
suggesting that PD reduced the effectiveness of tax in financing growth. The interaction&#13;
between tax and seigniorage had no discernible impact on growth in South Africa and&#13;
Republic of Congo but had a significant negative effect on growth in Nigeria (-0.02,&#13;
p=0.004), suggesting that seigniorage significantly reduced the effectiveness of tax in&#13;
fostering economic growth in Nigeria. Tax and TNRR interaction significantly impacted&#13;
growth in South Africa (-0.03, p=0.00) and Republic of Congo (-0.005, p=0.00), while&#13;
it had negligible effect in Nigeria. The simulation results showed that a higher PD&#13;
resulted in higher taxes and slower growth in the three countries. A higher seigniorage&#13;
increased tax and growth in the three countries. A higher TNRR increased growth but&#13;
lowered taxes in Nigeria and Republic of Congo but not in South Africa.&#13;
The impact of taxes on economic growth was weakened by public debt, seigniorage, and&#13;
total natural resource rents in sub-Saharan African countries. In order to encourage taxdriven economic growth across all countries, these Alternative Public Financing Options&#13;
should be used with caution.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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