Globalisation, Poverty and Corruption: Retarding Progress in South Africa

Globalisation, Poverty and Corruption: Retarding Progress in South Africa

Author: 
Salahuddin, Mohammad
Place: 
Oxon
Publisher: 
Taylor and Francis
Date published: 
2020
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Vink, Nick, jt. author
Ralph, Nicholas, jt. author
Gow, Jeff, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Development Southern Africa
Source: 
Development Southern Africa Vol 37 No 4 2020 pp 617-643
Abstract: 

Poverty and corruption can both immiserate a nation. Globalisation through open trade can potentially increase economic growth, providing employment and increased incomes to the poor. Corruption can dampen or even reduce these positive developments. Although globalisation is considered instrumental in development strategies, theoretically, the impact of globalisation on poverty reduction is ambiguous, an ambiguity that is also reflected in the empirical literature. The corruption-poverty literature clearly reveals that empirical findings on such association are at best heterogeneous. This article examines the effects of globalisation and corruption on poverty using time series data for South Africa for the period 1991-2016. Three indicators of poverty and recently developed measures of globalisation and corruption were employed in the logistic regression model used for estimation. The results confirm that globalisation reduces poverty while corruption intensifies it. The globalisation findings are robust across the different measures of poverty while unidirectional results show corruption increases poverty.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Salahuddin, Mohammad. Globalisation, Poverty and Corruption: Retarding Progress in South Africa . Oxon : Taylor and Francis , 2020. Development Southern Africa Vol 37 No 4 2020 pp 617-643 - Available at: https://library.au.int/globalisation-poverty-and-corruption-retarding-progress-south-africa