Publication series : Departmental Papers / Policy Papers
Author: Olivier Basdevant Mr. Andrew W Jonelis Miss Borislava Mircheva Mr. Slavi T. Slavov
Publisher: INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Publication year: 2014
E-ISBN: 9781498375320
Subject: F0 Economics;F7 Trade Economy
Language: ENG
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Description
Anecdotal evidence suggests that the economies of South Africa and its neighbors (Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe) are tightly integrated with each other. There are important institutional linkages. Across the region there are also large flows of goods and capital, significant financial sector interconnections, as well as sizeable labor movements and associated remittance flows. These interconnections suggest that South Africas GDP growth rate should affect positively its neighbors, a point we illustrate formally with the help of numerical simulations of the IMFs GIMF model. However, our review and update of the available econometric evidence suggest that there is no strong evidence of real spillovers in the region after 1994, once global shocks are controlled for. More generally, we find no evidence of real spillovers from South Africa to the rest of the continent post-1994. We investigate the possible reasons for this lack of spillovers. Most importantly, the economies of South Africa and the rest of Sub-Saharan Africa might have de-coupled in the mid-1990s. That is when international sanctions on South Africa ended and the country re-integrated with the global economy, while growth in the rest of the continent accelerated due to a combination of domestic and external factors.