A Spatial Analysis of Foreign Aid and Civil Society
Abstract
We use a Spatial Durbin Model to examine the relationship between civil society aid projects and measures of civil society including membership and participation in community groups and satisfaction with democracy in Nigeria and Uganda. We then study the effect of civil society aid programs on corruption, a proxy
for elite capture. The spatial model allows us to estimate the effects of project spillovers that may indirectly impact non project areas. We find that civil society aid projects are associated with a decrease in the creation of community groups and attendance at community meetings in Nigeria. In Uganda, we find that civil society aid projects have a negative effect on the membership of community groups in neighboring areas. We also find that civil society projects have a positive effect on satisfaction with democracy, but they reduce satisfaction in neighbouring areas in both Nigeria and Uganda. Our corruption measures reveal that corruption has a positive direct correlation with civil society aid projects in Uganda. A number of robustness measures are used to account for selection.
Other description
JEL: F35, D72, D73, O10.
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2017-01Author
Vecci, Joseph
Zelinsky, Tomas
Keywords
Foreign Aid
civil society
corruption
Africa
development
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
688
Language
eng