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ID117638
Title ProperDemocracy, government spending and economic growth
Other Title Informationthe case of Ghana, 1960-2008
LanguageENG
AuthorSakyi, Daniel ;  Adams, Samuel
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Economic theory predicts a growth enhancing activities of various core functions of government. Nonetheless, government spending in non-democratic countries often goes beyond these core functions, namely into rent-seeking and non-productive activities. This paper employs the Autoregressive Distributed Lag bounds testing approach to cointegration to investigate the extent to which democracy and government spending have had an impact on economic growth in Ghana over the period 1960-2008. The empirical results obtained are encouraging, revealing support for the high effi ciency of government spending in democracies' hypothesis. The paper demonstrates that democracy and government spending go hand in hand to have a positive impact on economic growth in Ghana in both the long and short run. The fi ndings and policy recommendations of the paper provide vital information relevant for developing countries involved in the democratisation process.
`In' analytical NoteMargin Vol. 6, No.3; Aug 2012: p.361-383
Journal SourceMargin Vol. 6, No.3; Aug 2012: p.361-383
Key WordsDemocracy ;  Government Spending ;  Economic Growth ;  Cointegration ;  Ghana