The Return to Foreign Aid

With Henrik Hansen

Abstract:

This paper investigates the marginal productivity of investment in the world’s poorest economies. The aim is to estimate the return on investments financed by foreign aid as well as by domestic resource mobilization, using cross-country aggregate data. In practice the return on both investment categories can be expected to vary considerably across countries and time. As a consequence we develop a correlated random coefficients approach to the issue at hand, which allows us to estimate the average aggregate rate of return on "aid investments" and "domestic investments". Across a wide array of estimators our principal finding is remarkably robust; the average aggregate gross return on "aid investments" falls in a 20-30 percent range, roughly the same as the return on investments funded by other sources than aid. This finding is well in accord with micro estimates of the economic return to aid.

Download pdf. file (Discussion paper 05-04, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen)


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Updated March 2005