Publication | Closed Access
The Political Economy of Aid Allocation in Africa: Evidence from Zambia
65
Citations
68
References
2018
Year
Development EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentAfrican Public PolicyAid AllocationRegional DevelopmentSocial SciencesPolitical EconomyDevelopment ProjectsAfrican DevelopmentLocal GovernanceEconomicsPublic PolicyPublic ExpenditureAfrican ConflictDevelopment AidAfrican PoliticsPolitical CompetitionAvailable DatasetEconomic PolicyPolitical GeographyBusinessGeographical DistributionDevelopment PolicyPolitical Science
Abstract: This article utilizes a newly available dataset on the geographical distribution of development projects in Zambia to test whether electoral incentives shape aid allocation at the subnational level. Based on this dataset, it argues that when political elites have limited information to target distributive goods specifically to swing voters, they allocate more donor projects to districts where opposition to the incumbent is strong, as opposed to districts where the incumbent enjoys greater popularity.
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