Ibrahim Elbadawi
Pontifical Catholic University of Chile
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Featured researches published by Ibrahim Elbadawi.
World Development | 1996
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Nader Majd
Abstract This paper examines the economic performance of the CFA franc zone versus non-CFA countries in recent years. A modified control-group approach is used to compare the evolution of macro-economic indicators in the CFA countries vis-a-vis other sub-Saharan African countries, controlling for initial conditions, changing exogenous internal and world environment, and policy stance. In addition, our approach allows for a formal testing of whether zone membership is a random. The implication of randomness (i.e., no selection bias) is that the CFA zone economies would have performed in the same fashion as the rest of sub-Saharan Africa, for example, in the absence of the zone. Our results show that the randomness assumption is only valid for the cases of GDP growth and inflation. For other indicators (savings, investment, and export ratios to GDP) the decision to participate in the zone is endogenous and is related to the expectation of improved economic performance. Subsequently, in the estimation of the zones effects on the latter group of indicators, we corrected for the ensuing “sample selectivity” bias by estimating that status indicator (participation versus non-participation) via a probit model. Our estimation results indicate a weakening competitive position of the CFA members, during the second half of 1980s relative to the first half, compared with the non-CFA countries, in terms of output growth as well as the performance of exports, investment, and savings. The exception is domestic inflation with the CFA countries faring better on that front. Results for a longer term comparison (the 1970s versus the 1980s) are somewhat mixed. While the estimated coefficients for the marginal effect of zone participation corroborates a better performance for the CFA zone over the group of comparators — in terms of exports, domestic savings and investment, and inflation — the zone failed to distinguish itself with regard to economic growth in the long run.
Archive | 2016
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Hoda Selim
Despite being blessed with immense oil resources, Arab countries have neither achieved economic prosperity nor became developed countries. This chapter provides a brief overview of issues related to understanding the origins and symptoms of the resource curse and the challenges triggered by oil dependency in the Arab World including the traditional issues related to economic diversification, Dutch Disease etc. Among the novel issues explored are the interactions between oil windfalls and weak institutions (including fiscal institutions and optimal exchange rate regimes) as well as the role of political economy factors of the impact of resource rents on the strategies of the ruling elites to fend-off potential revolts that might remove them from power.
Archive | 2012
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Raimundo Soto
This chapter provides a long-term analysis of the determinants of economic growth in Dubai in the period 1975–2008. The analysis focuses on long-run trends and abstracts from short-run fluctuations and other transient phenomena. We extend in time, scope, and depth previous work by the Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry (2004).
Journal of African Economies | 1997
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Raimundo Soto
Revista de Análisis Económico – Economic Analysis Review | 1994
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Raimundo Soto
World Development | 2012
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Linda Kaltani; Raimundo Soto
Documentos de Trabajo | 2012
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Raimundo Soto
Journal Economía Chilena | 2015
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Klaus Schmidt-Hebbel; Raimundo Soto
Archive | 2012
Omer Ali; Ibrahim Elbadawi
Archive | 2013
Ibrahim Elbadawi; Raimundo Soto