The pursuit of enhanced inclusive growth, a cornerstone of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), has generated extensive scholarly discourse, particularly regarding its interplay with fiscal decentralization in Africa. This study evaluates fiscal decentralization's impact on inclusive growth across 26 African nations (2002–2019) using fixed effects, Driscoll–Kraay, and generalized least squares (GLS) estimators, with robustness checks via Lewbel 2SLS, system‐GMM, and Kinky least squares. Three key findings emerge: first, fiscal decentralization consistently and significantly undermines inclusive growth across all specifications and metrics. Second, a U‐shaped relationship mirrors the Kuznets curve hypothesis, where initial decentralization exacerbates inequality before yielding equitable gains at higher income thresholds. Third, governance quality encompassing corruption control, regulatory efficacy, and political stability moderates this relationship, underscoring institutional frameworks' pivotal role. To mitigate disparities, policymakers must empower local authorities with greater fiscal responsibility over revenue collection and expenditure allocation, ensuring transparency and accountability. Concurrently, reforms should strengthen tax systems, optimize public spending, and enhance redistribution mechanisms, aligning decentralization strategies with broader objectives of welfare enhancement and sustainable growth.
Does Fiscal Decentralization Kill Inclusive Growth? Evidence From African Countries
Honoré Tékam Oumbé,Borice Augustin Ngounou,Edmond Noubissi Domguia,Malonne Hyppolite Ngnie,Thierry Messie Pondie
Published 2025 in Politics & Policy
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2025
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Politics & Policy
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2025-11-29
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