The Ghost of Financing Gap

The Ghost of Financing Gap

Author: William Easterly

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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The Harrod--Domar growth model supposedly died long ago. Still today, economists in the international financial institutions (IFIs) apply the Harrod--Domar model to calculate short-run investment requirements for a target growth rate. They then calculate a "financing gap" between the required investment and available resources and often fill the "financing gap" with foreign aid. The financing gap model has two simple predictions: (1) aid will go into investment one for one, and (2) there will be a fixed linear relationship between growth and investment in the short run. The data soundly reject these two predictions of the financing gap model.


The Ghost of Financing Gap

The Ghost of Financing Gap

Author: William Easterly

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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The ghost of a long-dead growth model still haunts aid to developing countries. The Harrod-Domar growth model supposedly died long ago. But for more than 40 years, economists working on developing countries have applied- still apply- Harrod-Domar model to calculate short-run investment requirements for a target growth rate. They then calculate a financing gap between the required investment and available resources and often fill the "financing gap" with foreign aid. Easterly traces the intellectual history of how a long-dead model came to influence today's aid allocation to developing countries. He asks whether the model's surprising afterlife is attributable to consistency with the 40 years of data that have accumulated during its use. The answer is "no." This paper-a product of the Development Research Group-is part of a larger effort in the group to study the determinants of economic growth.


The Ghost of Financing Gap: How the Harrod-Domar Growth Model Still Haunts Development Economics

The Ghost of Financing Gap: How the Harrod-Domar Growth Model Still Haunts Development Economics

Author: William Easterly

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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August 1997 The ghost of a long-dead growth model still haunts aid to developing countries. The Harrod-Domar growth model supposedly died long ago. But for more than 40 years, economists working on developing countries have applied- still apply- Harrod-Domar model to calculate short-run investment requirements for a target growth rate. They then calculate a financing gap between the required investment and available resources and often fill the financing gap with foreign aid. Easterly traces the intellectual history of how a long-dead model came to influence today's aid allocation to developing countries. He asks whether the model's surprising afterlife is attributable to consistency with the 40 years of data that have accumulated during its use. The answer is no. This paper-a product of the Development Research Group-is part of a larger effort in the group to study the determinants of economic growth.


Estimating financing gaps in rice production in southwestern Nigeria

Estimating financing gaps in rice production in southwestern Nigeria

Author: Temitope O. Ojo

Publisher: Intl Food Policy Res Inst

Published: 2019-11-27

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13:

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This study analyzed the financing gaps relative to production frontier of rice farmers in Southwestern Nigeria. A multistage sampling technique was used to collect cross sectional data from 360 rice farmers selected from three States in the region. A Cobb-Douglas stochastic frontier and an adapted form of Harrod-Domar (HD) Growth model was employed to determine the financing gap required for the farmers to be at the frontier level. The empirical results of the frontier model show that quantity of labor, quantity of rice as planting material and herbicides were statistically significant in explaining the variations in the efficiency of rice production in Nigeria. However, age, gender, farming experience, household size, access to credit, access to information, adoption of improved variety and location of rice farmers as sources of technical inefficiencies. As revealed by the result of the HD growth model, the average amount of credit per season that farmers had access to was, ₦38,630.56 while the mean financing in the form of credit required to produce at the frontier level was ₦193,626.50, showing a financing shortfall of about 80%. As unravelled by the result of the study, it can thus be concluded that technical efficiency of rice farmers can be improved by improving access to timely credit and agricultural information for improving rice productivity. These findings suggest that filling the financing gap of smallholder rice farmers will improve rice productivity in Nigeria. The study, therefore, recommends that strengthening the existing technology by building farmers’ capacity on farm management practices would be surest means of improving rice productivity growth in Nigeria. This would not only contribute to the intensification of rice production in Nigeria to meet its increasing rice demand, but also improve rice farmers’ productivity and their households’ incomes.


Growth

Growth

Author: Daniel Susskind

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 2024

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 0674294491

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Daniel Susskind traces the rich, surprisingly brief history of economic growth and responds to its ills. We cannot focus only on growth's upsides, but nor is degrowth a viable policy: the benefits of prosperity are too great to discard. Instead we must face tradeoffs, demoting growth from our top priority and reckoning with its moral challenges.