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dc.description.abstractThis study examines the relationship between formal institutions—both political and economic—and well-being in African countries from 2010 to 2020. Unlike previous research that often treats these institutions in isolation or as a combined factor, this study employs a disaggregated institutional framework proposed by Acemoglu et al. (2005) and Rodrik (2005) within a panel data model. The findings confirm that both political and economic institutions influence well-being, though their impacts differ. Economic institutions, particularly those fostering market creation and stability, contribute most significantly to well-being, while electoral rules exhibit minimal and weak effects. The results remain robust across various tests, including alternative control variables and subsample analyses. These findings suggest that African governments should prioritize economic institutional reforms before political reforms. Furthermore, fostering sincerity, trust, and collective commitment is essential for restructuring economic institutions, ensuring citizen participation in institutional design, and enhancing overall well-being.en
dc.titleInstitutions and well-being in Africa: do political and economic institutions matter?en
dc.title.alternativeFellow research paperen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::POLITICAL AND LEGAL QUESTIONS::POLITICAL CONDITIONS, INSTITUTIONS, MOVEMENTS::POLITICAL CONDITIONSen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND DEVELOPMENT FINANCE::ECONOMIC THEORY::INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICSen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::GEOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTORS::AFRICAen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::GEOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTORS::AFRICAen
uneca.creatorCorporate.fulltaxonomyCorporate Authors::United Nations. Economic Commission for Africaen
ags.creatorCorporateUnited Nations. Economic Commission for Africaen
ags.subjectThesaurusPOLITICAL CONDITIONSen
ags.subjectThesaurusINSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICSen
ags.subjectThesaurusAFRICAen
ags.subjectThesaurusAFRICAen
ags.descriptionNotesCopyright to this paper belongs to Marcellin Stephane Bella Ngadena and as such cannot be cited in part or in full until it is published by author.en
ags.descriptionNotesIncludes bibliographical reference and appendix.en
ags.publisherPlaceAddis Ababaen
ags.publisherNameUN.ECAen
dc.date.accessioned2025-03-04T19:03:58Z
dc.date.available2025-03-04T19:03:58Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10855/50330
uneca.workflow.processedtrue
ags.creatorPersonalNgadena, Marcellin Stephane Bella
uneca.language.supporteden
dc.format.extent21 p.: ill., map.
dc.languageeng
dc.typeResearch paper
ags.creatorCorporateUnited Nations. Economic Commission for Africa
ags.subjectThesaurusPOLITICAL CONDITIONS
ags.subjectThesaurusINSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS
ags.subjectThesaurusAFRICA
ags.subjectClassification01.01.00 POLITICAL CONDITIONS, INSTITUTIONS, MOVEMENTS
ags.subjectClassification02.02.00 ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ags.availabilityNumberb055689
ags.availabilityNumber2018
ags.availabilityLocationECA-HQ
ags.rights.termsofuserestricted
ags.JNb055689


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