AGDI currently has about 300 publications.
2016 |
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1. | Asongu, Rangan Gupta Simplice Economics Bulletin, 36 (3), pp. 1854-1867, 2016. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Trust; Inclusive Growth; Conditional Effects @article{Asongu_529, author = {Rangan Gupta Simplice Asongu}, url = {http://www.accessecon.com/Pubs/EB/2016/Volume36/EB-16-V36-I3-P181.pdf}, year = {2016}, date = {2016-09-30}, journal = {Economics Bulletin}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {1854-1867}, abstract = {The transition from Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has substantially shifted the policy debate from growth to inclusive growth. In this short note, we revisit the trust-growth nexus by exploiting a dataset on quality of growth (QG), recently made available to the scientific community. The empirical evidence is based on interactive contemporary and non-contemporary quantile regressions. Inequality and human development modifying variables are used as additional controls. The findings broadly support the positive role of trust in QG. In addition, relatively high thresholds of inequality are needed to change this positive trust-QG nexus in some distributions. The dominant shape from the influence of inclusive/human development is Kuznets or inverted Ushape: the return of inclusive/human development in the trust-QG nexus is decreasing in the bottom half of the QG distributions. As a main policy implication, decreasing (increasing) inequality (human development) would improve the positive trust-QG nexus in countries with low levels of QG.}, keywords = {Trust; Inclusive Growth; Conditional Effects}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } The transition from Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has substantially shifted the policy debate from growth to inclusive growth. In this short note, we revisit the trust-growth nexus by exploiting a dataset on quality of growth (QG), recently made available to the scientific community. The empirical evidence is based on interactive contemporary and non-contemporary quantile regressions. Inequality and human development modifying variables are used as additional controls. The findings broadly support the positive role of trust in QG. In addition, relatively high thresholds of inequality are needed to change this positive trust-QG nexus in some distributions. The dominant shape from the influence of inclusive/human development is Kuznets or inverted Ushape: the return of inclusive/human development in the trust-QG nexus is decreasing in the bottom half of the QG distributions. As a main policy implication, decreasing (increasing) inequality (human development) would improve the positive trust-QG nexus in countries with low levels of QG. |
2015 |
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2. | Asongu, Rangan Gupta Simplice A Trust and Quality of Growth: A Note 2015. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Trust; Inclusive Growth; Conditional Effects @workingpaper{Asongu2015b_40, title = {Trust and Quality of Growth: A Note}, author = {Rangan Gupta Simplice A. Asongu}, editor = {African 2015 Governance and Development Institute WP/15/026}, url = {http://www.afridev.org/RePEc/agd/agd-wpaper/Trust-and-Quality-of-Growth.-A-Note.pdf}, year = {2015}, date = {2015-03-01}, abstract = {The transition from Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has substantially shifted the policy debate from growth to inclusive growth. In this short note, we revisit the trust-growth nexus by exploiting a dataset on quality of growth (QG), recently made available to the scientific community. The empirical evidence is based on interactive contemporary and non-contemporary quantile regressions. Inequality and human development modifying variables are used as additional controls. The findings broadly support the positive role of trust in QG. In addition, relatively high thresholds of inequality are needed to change this positive trust-QG nexus in some distributions.}, keywords = {Trust; Inclusive Growth; Conditional Effects}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {workingpaper} } The transition from Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has substantially shifted the policy debate from growth to inclusive growth. In this short note, we revisit the trust-growth nexus by exploiting a dataset on quality of growth (QG), recently made available to the scientific community. The empirical evidence is based on interactive contemporary and non-contemporary quantile regressions. Inequality and human development modifying variables are used as additional controls. The findings broadly support the positive role of trust in QG. In addition, relatively high thresholds of inequality are needed to change this positive trust-QG nexus in some distributions. |