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Foreign Aid and Poverty Reduction in West African Nations: Insights and the Need for Policy Re-Orientation


Abdulrahman Ibrahim

Abstract

Poverty, a deteriorating healthcare system and insufficient educational standards are among the major macroeconomic problems facing African  countries. Foreign aid from Western countries to African countries has been hailed as one of the solutions to these problems. Thus, this study  investigated the impact of foreign aid on poverty using a panel data set of 14 West African nations. Foreign aid was disaggregated according to the  reason for which it was given while poverty was measured with three variables namely; poverty headcount, infant mortality, and literacy rate. Annual data  was sourced from the WDI (2022), WGI (2022) and OECD (2022), scoped 2008-2020. Using a two-step system GMM, the study found that total aid  insignificantly reduces poverty headcount in the presence of reduced corrupt practices. Furthermore, foreign aid allocated to health and education was found to lower infant mortality and improve literacy rates, respectively; however, these effects were only significant in the condition of reduced corrupt  practices. The study thus concludes that foreign aid works better when corrupt practices are reduced, and it recommends that policymakers in west- African countries should consider corruption control policies so that aid allocation is properly managed to improve its impact on poverty headcount,  infant mortality, and literacy rate. 


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eISSN: 2659-0271
print ISSN: 2659-028X