The nexus among foreign direct investment in renewable electricity industry, renewable electricity production, and economic growth in Africa

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Abstract

Africa is still struggling to mitigate its electricity insecurity issues. This situation renders foreign direct investment in the renewable electricity industry (FDIREI) and renewable electricity production (REP) to become simultaneously important to Africa. Using a novel dataset of FDIREI, this paper examines the existence and nature of cointegration and causality nexuses among FDIREI, REP, and economic growth (GDP) in 32 African countries over 2003–2019. For methodological robustness purposes; GDP is added. By applying the panel vector autoregression model based-Granger causality test and a static panel data model, which are followed by robustness tests, more informative results are reported. Importantly, we find evidence of the growth hypothesis between REP and GDP, as a unidirectional Granger causality is seen from REP to GDP. Further, the neutrality hypothesis is confirmed among the remaining variables. This left us with the importance of REP in revitalizing African countries’ economic growth. All facets of REP thus should be enhanced. © 2021 The Author(s). This open access article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 license.

Keywords

foreign direct investment (FDI), Renewable energy, Renewable electricity, Cointegration, Causality, Africa

Divisions

Faculty_of_Business_and_Accountancy

Funders

None

Publication Title

Cogent Economics and Finance

Volume

10

Issue

1

Publisher

Cogent OA

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