Litcius/Paper detail

Drivers of income inequality in Africa: Does institutional quality matter?

Mark Edem Kunawotor, Godfred A. Bokpin, Charles Barnor

2020African Development Review103 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract This paper examines the role institutional quality plays amongst the empirical drivers of income inequality in Africa. Using a dynamic two‐step difference GMM with robust standard errors over the period 1990–2017, we find no statistically significant effect of institutions in general, on income inequality. However, we find that institutional quality indicators such as control of corruption and the strict enforcement of the rule of law significantly reduce income inequality. We also find no statistically significant effects of the other institutional quality indicators such as government effectiveness, voice and accountability, regulatory quality and political stability on income inequality in our sample. We suggest that more premium be placed on corruption control and the stringent adherence to the rule of law in ensuring equitable distribution of income in Africa. Furthermore, we re‐echo suggestions that promote institutional development in Africa as institutions in general remain very weak.

Topics & Concepts

Rule of lawEconomic inequalityLanguage changeEconomicsInequalityEnforcementQuality (philosophy)Law enforcementGovernment (linguistics)Income distributionSample (material)Control (management)Distribution (mathematics)Gini coefficientPoliticsAccountabilityIncome inequality metricsPublic economicsDevelopment economicsPolitical scienceLawLiteratureEpistemologyPhilosophyArtLinguisticsManagementChromatographyChemistryMathematicsMathematical analysisEconomic Growth and DevelopmentCorruption and Economic DevelopmentFiscal Policy and Economic Growth
Drivers of income inequality in Africa: Does institutional quality matter? | Litcius