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Why isn't South Africa Growing Faster? a Comparative Approach / / Luc Eyraud



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Autore: Eyraud Luc Visualizza persona
Titolo: Why isn't South Africa Growing Faster? a Comparative Approach / / Luc Eyraud Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2009
Edizione: 1st ed.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (25 p.)
Disciplina: 382.0968
Soggetto topico: Economic development - Africa, Southern
Economics - Africa, Southern
Aggregate Productivity
Banks and Banking
Capacity
Capital and Total Factor Productivity
Capital
Comparative Studies of Countries
Cost
Cross-Country Output Convergence
Economywide Country Studies: Africa
Finance
Financial services
Human Capital
Income economics
Industrial productivity
Intangible Capital
Interest rates
Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects
Investment
Labor economics
Labor Economics: General
Labor Productivity
Labor productivity
Labor
Labour
Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
Macroeconomics
Macroeconomics: Consumption
Measurement of Economic Growth
National accounts
Occupational Choice
Private savings
Production and Operations Management
Production
Real interest rates
Saving and investment
Saving
Skills
Total factor productivity
Wealth
Soggetto geografico: South Africa
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references.
Nota di contenuto: CONTENTS; I. Introduction; II. Major Constraints on Growth in the Last Decade; A. First Decomposition: Demand Components of GDP; List of Figures; Figure 1. Contributions to GDP Growth; B. Productivity and Labor Input Characteristics; List of Tables; Table 1. Normalized Contributions of Demand Components to GDP Growth (percent); C. Capital, Labor, and Total Factor Productivity; Figure 2. Contributions to GDP Growth (1996-2006) (Percent); Table 2. Employment and Labor Force in South Africa and Comparators (average 1996- 2006) (Percent); Table 3. Results of the Third Decomposition (Percent)
III. Investment Determinants in South Africa Compared with the Panel Table 4. Production-Function Decomposition in South Africa (Percent); Figure 3. Gross Capital Formation (Percent of GDP); Figure 4. Real Interest Rate (Percent); IV. Releasing the Saving Constraint on Investment and Growth; A. National Saving in South Africa; Table 5. Doing Business Indicators (2003-2006); Figure 5. National Saving in South Africa (Percent of GNDI); Figure 6. Public and Private Saving Rates (Percent of GNDI); Figure 7. Saving Rates by Institutional Sector (Percent of GNDI)
B. An Accounting Decomposition of the Corporate Saving RateTable 6. Comparison of Saving-GNDI Ratios in South Africa and the Panel; C. Economic Determinants of Private Saving; Table 7. Average Long-term Contributions of the Explanatory Variables to the Private Saving Rate: Results for South Africa and the Panel and the Resulting Gap; Table 8. Average Long-term Contributions of the Explanatory Variables to the Decrease in the Private Saving Rate in South Africa; V. Conclusions and Policy Implications; Appendix
Table 9. Results: Level and Variations of the Accounting Components of the Corporate Saving RateReferences
Sommario/riassunto: The purpose of this paper is to examine factors that have constrained South Africa's growth since the end of apartheid by comparing its GDP components and its saving and investment performance with those of 10 faster-growing countries. The study finds that sluggish investment has undermined growth since 1996 and that the underinvestment is in part explained by limited saving. Thus, over the last decade, interactions between investment, saving, and production may have perpetuated slow growth in South Africa.
Titolo autorizzato: Why isn't South Africa growing faster  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-4623-7091-8
1-4527-8539-2
9786612842474
1-4518-7172-4
1-282-84247-1
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910816923903321
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Serie: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; ; No. 2009/025