cover image: The Impact of Digital Infrastructure on African Development (English)

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The Impact of Digital Infrastructure on African Development (English)

18 Nov 2021

This paper estimates the impact of digital infrastructure on economic growth and its sources. The analysis uses system generalized method of moments and finds evidence of a causal impact from the digital infrastructure variables to economic growth, its sources, income inequality, and poverty. The findings show that mobile connections have an impact on economic growth through the total factor productivity growth channel, while internet users drive it by the capital accumulation channel. Connections have a negative effect on the Gini coefficient, and internet users have a negative effect on the poverty headcount. The analysis also finds that human capital and access to electricity are important complementarities for digital infrastructure to reap benefits. There would be large economic gains if Africa were to close the digital infrastructure gap relative to other regions, yet there are some issues of affordability and skills that need to be addressed to reduce the usage gap and the digital divide across gender, rural-urban, and firm size.
rule of law digital economy access to finance internet of things digital technology digital infrastructure human capital mobile network rate of growth personal digital assistant flow of information million people access to financial service global economic prospect access to loan access to internet legal and regulatory framework absence of violence control of corruption increased access access to electricity number of connections per capita term use of information human resources information national payment system measure of use output per worker secondary school enrollment drivers of economic growth total factor productivity growth evolution over time annual average growth rate acquisition of skill physical capital accumulation method of moments capital per worker cumulative growth rate dynamic panel data model industrial country fragility conflict and violence information asymmetry problems delivery of product provision of content rate of output fragile conflict & violence

Authors

Calderon,Cesar, Cantu,Catalina

Disclosure Date
2021/11/18
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
The Impact of Digital Infrastructure on African Development
Originating Unit
Office of the Chief Economist (AFECE)
Published in
United States of America
Series Name
Policy Research working paper; no. WPS 9853;
Total Volume(s)
1
Unit Owning
Off of Sr VP Dev Econ/Chief Econ (DECVP)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

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