The Impact of Public Debt on Economic Growth in Zimbabwe from 1980 – 2020
- Author
- Kapeta, Elizabeth. T
- Title
- The Impact of Public Debt on Economic Growth in Zimbabwe from 1980 – 2020
- Abstract
-
The purpose of this study was to ascertain how Zimbabwe's government debt impacted economic growth. The study was motivated by the government's reliance on borrowing money from outside sources to address the debt problem and the notion that finding new sources of outside funding is the primary objective in doing so. Therefore, even though the nation's debt
is large and has become unmanageable, there is evidence that more borrowing is necessary. Zimbabwe's real growth rate has generally been declining, but the public debt of the nation is increasing. This may suggest that Zimbabwe's real growth rate is being constrained by the
nation's mounting national debt. This study examines the impact of Zimbabwe's public debt on economic growth between 1980 and 2020. The public debt stock is divided into domestic and external debt in order to evaluate the impact of each debt type independently on economic
development. The data was placed through diagnostic analysis prior to estimation. Long-term correlations were established between the variables real economic growth, domestic debt, foreign debt, budget deficit, external debt payment, and investment. A short-run Error Correction Model (ECM) must be used to represent the dynamics in short-run disequilibrium toward the long-run equilibrium. The empirical results showed that foreign debt has both a
long-term and short-term negative effect on Zimbabwe's real growth rate. Zimbabwe clearly has a "debt overhang" as a result of this. Long-term economic growth is positively impacted by domestic debt. Although negative, the effect is insignificant in the near run. The research's
conclusions have a number of policy implications. Zimbabwe needs to strengthen its debt management in order to keep the state debt within reasonable bounds. The country can gain from debt-to-equity swaps by privatizing failed parastatals. As a result, they would become aggressive and efficient. By increasing jobs and attracting more foreign direct investment, this step may enhance Zimbabwe's actual growth rate - Date
- 2022
- Publisher
- BUSE
- Keywords
- Public Debt
- Economic Growth
- Supervisor
- N/A
- Item sets
- Department of Economics
Part of The Impact of Public Debt on Economic Growth in Zimbabwe from 1980 – 2020