Working paper

Did the Aid Boom Pacify Sub-Saharan Africa?

Ex-Post Evaluation Using a Near-Identification Approach

Jean-Paul Azam, and Véronique Thelen

Abstract

The incidence of civil war in Sub-Saharan Africa since the turn of the century is less than half of what it was on average in the last quarter of the 20th century. This paper shows that the aid boom triggered by 9/11 played a key role in achieving purposefully this result using panel data for 46 African countries over four decades. It applies a nearidentification approach to test the aid-conflict trade-off, taking due account of asymmetric information between the donors and the econometrician. Preference proxies are used in the first-stage to elicit the relevant hidden information.

Keywords

Foreign Aid; Africa; Civil Wars;

JEL codes

  • F35: Foreign Aid
  • N47: Africa • Oceania
  • P45: International Trade, Finance, Investment, and Aid

Reference

Jean-Paul Azam, and Véronique Thelen, Did the Aid Boom Pacify Sub-Saharan Africa?: Ex-Post Evaluation Using a Near-Identification Approach, TSE Working Paper, n. 14-544, December 2014, revised June 2019.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 14-544, December 2014, revised June 2019