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Regional Spillovers in Sub-Saharan Africa: Exploring Different Channels

Author

Listed:
  • Francisco Arizala
  • Mr. Matthieu Bellon
  • Ms. Margaux MacDonald
  • Mr. Montfort Mlachila
  • Mustafa Yenice

Abstract

After close to two decades of strong economic activity, overall growth in sub-Saharan Africa decelerated markedly in 2015–16 as the largest economies experienced negative or flat growth. Regional growth started recovering in 2017, but the question remains of how trends in the economies stuck in low gear will spill over to the countries that have maintained robust growth. This note illuminates the discussion by identifying growth spillover channels. The focus is on trade, banking, financial, remittance, investment, fiscal, and security channels, which are the most prominent and most likely to transmit growth trends across borders. In addition to bringing together findings from a broad array of existing research, the note identifies countries that are the most likely sources of regional spillovers and those that are most likely to be impacted, and provides estimates for the size of these channels. It finds that intraregional trade and remittance flows are an important channel for growth spillovers, while banking channels are less important but will remain a risk going forward. Finally, the note documents other important spillover channels through financial markets contagion, revenue-sharing arrangements in fiscal unions, commodity-pricing policies, corporate investment, and forced migration. The main takeaway is that the level of interdependence among sub-Saharan countries is higher than is generally assumed. Consequently, there is a need for additional emphasis on regional surveillance and spillover analysis, along with traditional bilateral surveillance.

Suggested Citation

  • Francisco Arizala & Mr. Matthieu Bellon & Ms. Margaux MacDonald & Mr. Montfort Mlachila & Mustafa Yenice, 2018. "Regional Spillovers in Sub-Saharan Africa: Exploring Different Channels," IMF Spillover Notes 2018/001, International Monetary Fund.
  • Handle: RePEc:imf:imfsns:2018/001
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    Cited by:

    1. Francisco Arizala & Mr. Matthieu Bellon & Ms. Margaux MacDonald, 2019. "Regional Growth Spillovers in Sub-Saharan Africa," IMF Working Papers 2019/160, International Monetary Fund.
    2. Peist, Moritz Manuel, 2023. "Original sin and the CFA Franc: A case study of the West African Economic and Monetary Union," IPE Working Papers 210/2023, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Institute for International Political Economy (IPE).
    3. Amr Hosny, 2020. "Remittance Concentration and Volatility: Evidence from 72 Developing Countries," International Economic Journal, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 34(4), pages 553-570, October.

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