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Author

Khalid Sekkat

Other affiliations: ERF, Free University of Brussels
Bio: Khalid Sekkat is an academic researcher from Université libre de Bruxelles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Exchange rate & Foreign direct investment. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 178 publications receiving 4362 citations. Previous affiliations of Khalid Sekkat include ERF & Free University of Brussels.


Papers
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TL;DR: The authors assesses the relationship between the impact of corruption on growth and investment and the quality of governance in a sample of 63 to 71 countries between 1970 and 1998 and find that corruption has a negative impact on growth independently from its impact on investment.
Abstract: This paper assesses the relationship between the impact of corruption on growth and investment and the quality of governance in a sample of 63 to 71 countries between 1970 and 1998. Like previous studies, we find a negative effect of corruption on both growth and investment. Unlike previous studies, we find that corruption has a negative impact on growth independently from its impact on investment. These impacts are, however, different depending on the quality of governance. They tend to worsen when indicators of the quality of governance deteriorate. This supports the “sand the wheels” view on corruption and contradicts the “grease the wheels” view, which postulates that corruption may help compensate bad governance.

628 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors assesses the relationship between the impact of corruption on growth and investment and the quality of governance in a sample of 63 to 71 countries between 1970 and 1998 and find that corruption has a negative impact on growth independently from its impact on investment.
Abstract: This paper assesses the relationship between the impact of corruption on growth and investment and the quality of governance in a sample of 63 to 71 countries between 1970 and 1998. Like previous studies, we find a negative effect of corruption on both growth and investment. Unlike previous studies, we find that corruption has a negative impact on growth independently from its impact on investment. These impacts are, however, different depending on the quality of governance. They tend to worsen when indicators of the quality of governance deteriorate. This supports the “sand the wheels” view on corruption and contradicts the “grease the wheels” view, which postulates that corruption may help compensate bad governance.

527 citations

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TL;DR: This article examined the extent to which institutions' functioning disables a greater participation of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) in the world economy using a large sample of countries over the 1990s and found that the impact of an improvement in the quality of institutions may result in a sensitive increase of FDI inflows and manufactured exports.
Abstract: Using a large sample of countries over the 1990s, this paper examines the extent to which institutions’ functioning disables a greater participation of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) in the world economy. It focuses on the impact on manufactured exports and FDI attractiveness and considers a broad index of political risk as well as indices targeted toward specific aspects of governance (corruption, government effectiveness and the rule of law). The results are robust to different econometric approaches and lend strong support to the hypothesis that the functioning of institutions may disable the participation of MENA countries in the world economy. They suggest that the impact of an improvement in the quality of institutions may result in a sensitive increase of FDI inflows and manufactured exports. That increase is comparable to the one resulting from liberalisation policies. Hence, although institutional reforms can take time, they deserve the necessary efforts given their outcomes as compared to other reforms.

172 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the importance of openness, infrastructure availability, and sound economic and political conditions in increasing developing countries' attractiveness with respect to FDI and show that these factors are particularly important for South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.
Abstract: The paper assesses the importance of openness, infrastructure availability, and sound economic and political conditions in increasing developing countries' attractiveness with respect to FDI. The results show that these factors are particularly important for South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. The paper also shows a higher impact of these factors on FDI in the manufacturing sector than on total FDI. The message to developing countries' policymakers is twofold. First, efforts towards openness should be initiated or further increased in order to make their economies attractive to foreign investors. Second, improvements in other aspects of the investment climate are important complements to openness and result in additional and sensitive increases in FDI inflows.

169 citations

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TL;DR: This article examined the extent to which different dimensions of the institutional framework affect total exports, exports of manufactured goods, and exports of non-manufactured goods in a panel of countries over 1990-2000.
Abstract: Using a panel of countries over 1990–2000, this paper examines the extent to which different dimensions of the institutional framework affect total exports, exports of manufactured goods, and exports of nonmanufactured goods. It is observed that exports of manufactured goods are positively affected by the quality of institutions but neither total exports nor nonmanufactured exports. The latter may even correlate negatively with the quality of institutions. The results are robust to estimation methods. (JEL F14, F15, O17)

166 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI

1,828 citations

01 Jan 2016

1,631 citations

01 Jan 2014

1,519 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that undervaluation of the currency (a high real exchange rate) stimulates economic growth, particularly for developing countries, and they present two categories of explanations for why this may be so, the first focusing on institutional weaknesses, and the second on product market failures.
Abstract: I show that undervaluation of the currency (a high real exchange rate) stimulates economic growth. This is true particularly for developing countries. This finding is robust to using different measures of the real exchange rate and different estimation techniques. I also provide some evidence that the operative channel is the size of the tradable sector (especially industry). These results suggest that tradables suffer disproportionately from the government or market failures that keep poor countries from converging toward countries with higher incomes. I present two categories of explanations for why this may be so, the first focusing on institutional weaknesses, and the second on product-market failures. A formal model elucidates the linkages between the real exchange rate and the rate of economic growth.

1,453 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors survey the empirical literature analyzing the process of enterprise restructuring in transition economies and provide new insights into the relative effectiveness of different reform policies, and into how this effectiveness varies across regions.
Abstract: We survey the empirical literature analyzing the process of enterprise restructuring in transition economies. The survey provides new insights into the relative effectiveness of different reform policies, and into how this effectiveness varies across regions. We study the effects of privatization, the importance of different types of owners, the effects of foreign and domestic competition, the consequences of soft budgets, and the role of managerial incentives and managerial human capital, on enterprise restructuring.

1,141 citations