The study investigates whether development assistance can be used to crowd-out the negative effec... more The study investigates whether development assistance can be used to crowd-out the negative effect of terrorism on international trade. The empirical evidence is based on a panel of 78 developing countries for the period 1984-2008 and Quantile Regressions. The following main findings are established. First, bilateral aid significantly reduces the negative effect of transnational terrorism on trade in the top quantiles of the trade distribution. Second, multilateral aid also significantly mitigates the negative effect of terrorism dynamics on trade in the top quantiles of the trade distributions. It follows that it is primarily in countries with above median levels of international trade that development assistance can be used as an effective policy tool for dampening the adverse effects of terrorism on trade. Practical implications are discussed.
The study assesses how external flows influence inclusive human development in a panel of 48 coun... more The study assesses how external flows influence inclusive human development in a panel of 48 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa for the period 2000-2012. The empirical evidence is based on Tobit regressions and Generalised Method of Moments. The findings from both estimation techniques reveal that remittances and FDI increase inclusive development whereas foreign aid has the opposite effect. The results suggest some positive and negative impacts of interest for further analysis. First, remittances are negatively associated with: (i) Middle income countries compared to Low income countries where the effect is not significant; (ii) French Civil law countries compared to English Common law countries where the effect is positive and (iii) Resource-rich countries compared to their Resource-poor counterparts where the effect is positive. Second, foreign aid is more negatively linked to Low income, French Civil law, Islam-dominated, Un-landlocked, Resource-rich and Politically-unstable countries. Third, FDI is positively associated with: (i) Low income, French Civil law and Landlocked countries compared to respectively Middle income, English Common law and Un-landlocked countries where the effect is insignificant and (ii) Politically-stable countries compared to their Politically-unstable counterparts where the effect is negative.
It is important to note that the Aboriginal Population of Canada grew six times faster than Non-A... more It is important to note that the Aboriginal Population of Canada grew six times faster than Non-Aboriginal between 1996-2006 (Statistics Canada, 2009). It is projected to continue growing at this rate. According to statistics Canada (2009), the population will increase from 3.9% in 2006 to between 4.0% and 5.3% by 2031. This figure is translated thus: 1.3 million aboriginals in 2006 to 1.7 – 2.2 million aboriginals by 2031. This is a very significate increase in the population. If certain issues affecting productive capacity of the Aboriginal are not addressed, and effective policies not implemented to address the underlying issues, the society will be polarized. This article provides evidence to prove that resident schools is one of those government policies that continue impacting Aboriginal long after its closure. This paper is a perspective study which focuses on the views and agenda surrounding the topic. On the one hand, the agenda perspective emphasis of the study aims to provide answers to three fundamental questions that are essential for the robust positioning of a study within the context of existing literature: (i) what has been covered by extant literature in the light of the problem statement; (ii) what are shortcomings in the engaged literature and (ii) how does the present study aim to address identified shortcomings? On the other hand, the agenda dimension builds on the “view perspective” to propose policy measures and future research directions.
The purpose of this study is to dispel some myths associated with migrants in order to improve so... more The purpose of this study is to dispel some myths associated with migrants in order to improve socioeconomic appraisal of the consequences of the recent surge of migrants into Europe. We argue that: (i) the concern about loss of Christian cultural values is lacking in substance because compared to a relatively near historical epoch or era, very few European citizens do go to Church in contemporary Europe; (ii) the threat to European liberal institutions is falsifiable and statistically fragile because it is not substantiated with significant evidence; (iii) the insignificant proportion of the Moslem population that is aligned with Islamic fundamentalism invalidates the hypothesis on importation of radical Islamic fundamentalism and (iv) the concern about social security burden is relevant only in the short-term because of Europe's ageing population.
The study investigates whether development assistance can be used to crowd-out the negative effec... more The study investigates whether development assistance can be used to crowd-out the negative effect of terrorism on international trade. The empirical evidence is based on a panel of 78 developing countries for the period 1984-2008 and Quantile Regressions. The following main findings are established. First, bilateral aid significantly reduces the negative effect of transnational terrorism on trade in the top quantiles of the trade distribution. Second, multilateral aid also significantly mitigates the negative effect of terrorism dynamics on trade in the top quantiles of the trade distributions. It follows that it is primarily in countries with above median levels of international trade that development assistance can be used as an effective policy tool for dampening the adverse effects of terrorism on trade. Practical implications are discussed.
The study assesses how external flows influence inclusive human development in a panel of 48 coun... more The study assesses how external flows influence inclusive human development in a panel of 48 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa for the period 2000-2012. The empirical evidence is based on Tobit regressions and Generalised Method of Moments. The findings from both estimation techniques reveal that remittances and FDI increase inclusive development whereas foreign aid has the opposite effect. The results suggest some positive and negative impacts of interest for further analysis. First, remittances are negatively associated with: (i) Middle income countries compared to Low income countries where the effect is not significant; (ii) French Civil law countries compared to English Common law countries where the effect is positive and (iii) Resource-rich countries compared to their Resource-poor counterparts where the effect is positive. Second, foreign aid is more negatively linked to Low income, French Civil law, Islam-dominated, Un-landlocked, Resource-rich and Politically-unstable countries. Third, FDI is positively associated with: (i) Low income, French Civil law and Landlocked countries compared to respectively Middle income, English Common law and Un-landlocked countries where the effect is insignificant and (ii) Politically-stable countries compared to their Politically-unstable counterparts where the effect is negative.
It is important to note that the Aboriginal Population of Canada grew six times faster than Non-A... more It is important to note that the Aboriginal Population of Canada grew six times faster than Non-Aboriginal between 1996-2006 (Statistics Canada, 2009). It is projected to continue growing at this rate. According to statistics Canada (2009), the population will increase from 3.9% in 2006 to between 4.0% and 5.3% by 2031. This figure is translated thus: 1.3 million aboriginals in 2006 to 1.7 – 2.2 million aboriginals by 2031. This is a very significate increase in the population. If certain issues affecting productive capacity of the Aboriginal are not addressed, and effective policies not implemented to address the underlying issues, the society will be polarized. This article provides evidence to prove that resident schools is one of those government policies that continue impacting Aboriginal long after its closure. This paper is a perspective study which focuses on the views and agenda surrounding the topic. On the one hand, the agenda perspective emphasis of the study aims to provide answers to three fundamental questions that are essential for the robust positioning of a study within the context of existing literature: (i) what has been covered by extant literature in the light of the problem statement; (ii) what are shortcomings in the engaged literature and (ii) how does the present study aim to address identified shortcomings? On the other hand, the agenda dimension builds on the “view perspective” to propose policy measures and future research directions.
The purpose of this study is to dispel some myths associated with migrants in order to improve so... more The purpose of this study is to dispel some myths associated with migrants in order to improve socioeconomic appraisal of the consequences of the recent surge of migrants into Europe. We argue that: (i) the concern about loss of Christian cultural values is lacking in substance because compared to a relatively near historical epoch or era, very few European citizens do go to Church in contemporary Europe; (ii) the threat to European liberal institutions is falsifiable and statistically fragile because it is not substantiated with significant evidence; (iii) the insignificant proportion of the Moslem population that is aligned with Islamic fundamentalism invalidates the hypothesis on importation of radical Islamic fundamentalism and (iv) the concern about social security burden is relevant only in the short-term because of Europe's ageing population.
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Papers by Ivo J. Leke
This paper is a perspective study which focuses on the views and agenda surrounding the topic. On the one hand, the agenda perspective emphasis of the study aims to provide answers to three fundamental questions that are essential for the robust positioning of a study within the context of existing literature: (i) what has been covered by extant literature in the light of the problem statement; (ii) what are shortcomings in the engaged literature and (ii) how does the present study aim to address identified shortcomings? On the other hand, the agenda dimension builds on the “view perspective” to propose policy measures and future research directions.
This paper is a perspective study which focuses on the views and agenda surrounding the topic. On the one hand, the agenda perspective emphasis of the study aims to provide answers to three fundamental questions that are essential for the robust positioning of a study within the context of existing literature: (i) what has been covered by extant literature in the light of the problem statement; (ii) what are shortcomings in the engaged literature and (ii) how does the present study aim to address identified shortcomings? On the other hand, the agenda dimension builds on the “view perspective” to propose policy measures and future research directions.