Achieving sustainable development in ECOWAS countries: the impact of trade openness, poverty and human capital
Musliudeen Adewale Balogun (),
Sheriffdeen Adewale Tella (),
Oluwaseyi Adedayo Adelowokan (),
Jimoh Sina Ogede () and
Soliu Bidemi Adegboyega ()
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Musliudeen Adewale Balogun: Olabisi Onabanjo University
Sheriffdeen Adewale Tella: Olabisi Onabanjo University
Oluwaseyi Adedayo Adelowokan: Olabisi Onabanjo University
Jimoh Sina Ogede: Olabisi Onabanjo University
Soliu Bidemi Adegboyega: Olabisi Onabanjo University
Future Business Journal, 2024, vol. 10, issue 1, 1-18
Abstract:
Abstract This study investigates the relationship among trade openness, poverty, and human capital development in the pursuit of sustainable development across a panel of ten ECOWAS economies over a 34-year period (1987–2020). Specifically, it examines the roles of trade openness, poverty, and human capital development in sustainable development, while also exploring the moderating role of trade openness on the poverty-sustainable development relationship within the ECOWAS region. To conduct this analysis, the study employs panel autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) using both the Pool Mean Group (PMG) estimator and Cross-Sectional Autoregressive Distributed Lag (CS-ARDL) techniques, taking into account cross-sectional dependence, cointegration, and other relevant diagnostic tests. The findings indicate that poverty has a consistent negative long-run impact on sustainable development, while human capital is positively associated with sustainability over the long term. Trade openness lacks a significant relationship with sustainability in both the short and long run. Inflation is insignificantly related to sustainability. Exchange rates demonstrate mixed effects. In terms of moderation, trade openness positively and significantly moderates the poverty-sustainability relationship in the long run but not the short run. Robustness testing using the AMG and P-OLS models further validates the significant positive impact of human capital and the insignificant effect of trade openness on sustainable development. Given poverty’s significant negative association and human capital’s positive link with sustainable development, the findings suggest the need for integrated policy mixes prioritizing multidimensional poverty reduction and human capability enhancement to promote sustainability objectives across both short- and long-term horizons in ECOWAS countries. Furthermore, prudent management of exchange rates and well-designed trade policies should complement these efforts to mitigate potential risks and harness any benefits for sustainability.
Keywords: Sustainable development; Trade openness; Poverty; Human capital; West Africa (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1186/s43093-024-00367-9
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