Instability and uncertainty are important factors in Africa's poor investment record over the past two decades.
A recent (but rapidly growing) literature has focused on how uncertainty and instability affect the adoption of fixed investment projects. That literature shows that if fixed investment projects are costly or impossible to reverse, uncertainty can become a powerful deterrent to investment.
Serven reviews the literature on irreversible investment to identify the implications for macroeconomic policy and to gauge the practical importance, especially for Sub-Saharan Africa, of the link between uncertainty and investment.
He presents empirical evidence on the negative association between investment performance and measures of instability, using cross-section time-series data. That evidence suggests that instability and uncertainty are important factors in Africa's poor investment record over the last two decades.
This paper a product of the Macroeconomics and
Growth Division, Policy Research Department is part of a larger
effort in the department to understand the determinants of private
investment. Copies of this paper are available free from the World
Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Emily
Khine, room N11-061, telephone 202-473-7471, fax 202-522-3518,
Internet address kkhine@worldbank.org. (44 pages)
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