Does Economics Have an “Africa Problem”? Some Data and...

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1 Does Economics Have an “Africa Problem”? Some Data and Preliminary Thoughts Grieve Chelwa Postdoctoral Fellow Center for African Studies Harvard University Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research University of the Witwatersrand [email protected] OR [email protected] June 8, 2017 VERY PRELIMINARY DRAFT – DO NOT CITE OR CIRCULATE

Transcript of Does Economics Have an “Africa Problem”? Some Data and...

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DoesEconomicsHavean“AfricaProblem”?SomeDataandPreliminaryThoughtsGrieveChelwaPostdoctoralFellowCenterforAfricanStudiesHarvardUniversityVisitingPostdoctoralFellowWitsInstituteforSocialandEconomicResearchUniversityoftheWitwatersrandgrieve_chelwa@[email protected],2017

VERYPRELIMINARYDRAFT–DONOTCITEORCIRCULATE

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“The ideasofeconomists […],bothwhen theyare rightandwhen theyarewrong,aremore

powerfulthancommonlyunderstood.Indeed,theworldisruledbylittleelse.Practicalmen,who

believethemselvestobequiteexemptfromanyintellectualinfluences,areusuallytheslavesof

somedefuncteconomist.Madmen inauthority,whohearvoices intheair,aredistillingtheir

frenzyfromanacademicscribblerofafewyearsback.”

JohnMaynardKeynes1“Inthisdiscourseoftheblind,thesidewiththemoneyusuallywon.”

EboeHutchful2

1. INTRODUCTION

1.1. Origins

Thisessay,whichhasaspectsofthepersonal,ismyattemptatgrapplinginamorestructured

waywithmygrowingambivalencetowardseconomics,inparticularthekindthathascometobe

described as “mainstreameconomics”.3 I became fully aware of this ambivalence during the

northernhemisphericsummerof2014whilereadingandfollowingthedebatesaroundThomas

1Keynes,J.M.,1936.TheGeneralTheoryofEmployment,InterestandMoney.PalgraveMacmillan.2 Hutchful, E., 1995. “Adjustment in Africa and Fifty Years of the Bretton Woods Institutions: Change or

Consolidation?”,CanadianJournalofDevelopmentStudies,16(3).3 “Mainstream economics” refers to the dominant type of economics, sometimes referred to as “neoclassical

economics”, that is taught in “leading” universities, especially in theUnited States, andwhose research output

dominates“leading”scholarlyoutletsinthediscipline.Whenmostpeoplecriticizeeconomicsandeconomists,they

arelikelycriticizingmainstreameconomics.

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Piketty’smuchacclaimedbookoninequality,CapitalintheTwenty-FirstCentury.4InSouthAfrica,

whereIwasdoingmygraduatestudiesatthetime,physicalcopiesofbooksreleasedinNorth

AmericaorWesternEuropetendedtoarrivewithadelay.Butthroughthemiracleoftheinternet,

whichinturnspawnedthee-book,IwasabletoreadCapitalandfollowdebatesarounditin“real

time”.Atthetime,mostofmyintellectualheroeswerebasedatuniversitiesintheUnitedStates

owingtoasteadystapleofthetypeofliteratureIwasmadetoconsumeattheUniversityofCape

Town.

Disagreementanddebatearethemainstayofacademia.Butwhatstruckmemostaboutthe

online debates and disagreements aroundCapital were the extents towhichmy intellectual

heroes were willing to go to discredit Piketty. I saw leading economists write in prominent

periodicals thatProfessorPikettyhadneglected todealwith issueXandyetXhadanentire

chapterdedicatedtoitinthebook.ThencamethescandalwiththeFinancialTimes(FT),aleading

newspaperbased in theUnitedKingdom,wherePikettywas accusedof fabricatinghistorical

data5inspiteofthefactthathisbookcamewith200pagesworthofnotesanda100pageonline

dataappendixanticipatingtheaccusations levelledbytheFT.Someof thecommentaryeven

tookonaspectsofbeingpersonal.6Allthis,atleasttome,wasunprecedented.

4Piketty,T.(2014).CapitalintheTwenty-FirstCentury.Cambridge:HarvardUniversityPress5“Pikettyfindingsundercutbyerrors”,FinancialTimes,availableat:https://www.ft.com/content/e1f343ca-e281-

11e3-89fd-00144feabdc06 “France’s ‘rock star’ economist Thomas Piketty ‘beat former lover’, Daily Telegraph, available at:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/10807714/Frances-rock-star-economist-Thomas-

Piketty-beat-former-lover.html

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Inthewakeoftheglobalfinancialcrisisandtherecessionthatensued,inequalityre-emergedas

an important topic of debate within economics inspiring several books, even within the

mainstreamvintagewhereinequalityhadtraditionallybeenviewedastheinevitableoutcomeof

a “meritocratic” process.7 Claudia Goldin and Lawrence Katz published The Race Between

Education and Technology8 in 2010while Joseph Stiglitz publishedThe Price of Inequality9 in

2013.SowhywasPikettyandhisCapitalsingledforwhatwaspatentlyunfaircriticism?

Was it because Piketty had challenged the adequacy of one of the linchpins ofmainstream

economics, namely that one’s income was determined by their incremental contribution to

production?

Hewasbynomeansthefirsteconomistworkingwithinthemainstreamneoclassicalparadigm

tochallengethe“marginaltheoryofdistribution”.JosephStiglitz,inthePriceofInequalityand

indeed inhisacademiccareerhadpointedout,withoutrelent, thepervasivenessofso-called

“market failures” – that is, instances where the workings of perfectly competitive textbook

7SeeMankiw,N.G.,2013.“DefendingtheOnePercent”.JournalofEconomicPerspectives,27(3):21-348Goldin,C.andKatz,L.F.,2010.TheRacebetweenEducationandTechnology.Cambridge:HarvardUniversityPress9 Stiglitz, J.E., 2013.ThePriceof Inequality:HowToday’sDivided Society EndangersOur Future.NewYork:WW

NortonandCompany

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economics broke down.10 As far as I could tell, Stiglitz hadnot received the kindof criticism

reservedforPiketty.

TheonlyplausibleexplanationtomymindwasthatPikettyhadchallengedthehegemonicreign

ofAmericanand,toalesserextent,Britisheconomistsonowningtheconversationineconomics.

Pikettywas,bymanycounts,anoutsider.Exceptforaverybriefperiodintheearly1990s,hehad

spenthisentireacademiccareerinFrance.11Heofcoursepublishedhisworkinleadingscholarly

journalsinthediscipline,whichistosayinUS-basedoutlets.Butthisworkhardlyhadanyimpact

beyondthenarrowgroupofscholarswhowereworkingoninequality.Tomymind,whatwas

differentaboutCapitalwasnotsomuchthataneconomistwasmountingachallengeonthe

hallowed tenets of neoclassical economics but that such a widely publicized challenge was

comingfroman“outsider”.12

L’affairePikettyofthesummerof2014ledmetowardsmyownDamasceneConversion.Priorto

this, I uncritically read the economics literature paying no attention to suchmatters as the

10JosephStiglitzwas,asamatteroffact,awardedtheNobelMemorialPrizeineconomicsforhisworkonmarket

failuresin2001.11AftercompletinghisdoctorateinFrance,heservedasanassistantprofessorattheMassachusetts Instituteof

Technologyforthreeyears.HewritesinCapitalthathisreasonforhurryingbacktoFrancewasthathefoundthe

workofU.S.economistshighlyabstractwithlittleattemptgiventotestingtheorywithdata.12Ofcoursethewhole“insider”“outsider”perspectiveisrelative.ToeconomistsinAfrica,Pikettyisaninsider,after

allmanyofhispublicationshaveappearedinsuchmainstreamjournalsastheQuarterlyJournalofEconomicsand

Econometrica,amongothers.Whatisimportant,however,isthatfromtheperspectiveofU.S.economists,Piketty

wasanoutsider,evenifslightlylesssothanthetypicaleconomistinAfrica.

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“politicsofknowledgeproduction”.Ihadbeensoldontheideathateconomicswasascience,

perhapsonparwithphysics.Therefore,itdidnotmatterthateconomics,particularlythekind

thatmatteredformypartoftheworld,wasdominatedbyvoicesatU.S.universities.Povertyand

underdevelopmentwerepovertyandunderdevelopmentregardlessofwhostudiedthem.Tomy

mind, thedominanceby theU.S.merely reflected the fact that economists based there had

better diagnoses of the ailments that afflicted us. In otherwords, the “market for ideas” in

economicswasperfectlyandfairlycompetitive.

Aftertheeventsof2014,Ibegantowonderifthismarketwasinactualfactamonopolywith

significant barriers to entry erected against “outsiders”. And just as the theory ofmonopoly

predicted“inefficiencies”,didthisstateofaffairs,atleastinpart,explainthedismalnatureof

ourknowledgeondevelopmentandparticularlyonthefailuretoproperlydiagnosetheAfrican

malaise?13,14

Mythoughtsonthiswereinitiallylaiddowninan800wordpieceontheonlineblogAfricaIsA

CountryinFebruaryof2015.15Ishowedinthatpiecethattherewasanunderrepresentationof

African-based scholars on the editorial boards of at least three leading scholarly outlets in

13A2005reviewoftheeconomics literatureongrowthand/ordevelopmentfoundthattherewereat least145

different explanatory variables of growth and/or development with 43 conceptually different theories in the

literature!SeeDurlaufetal.,2005.“GrowthEconometrics”inHandbookofEconomicGrowth.14 On the less than satisfactory state of the economics literature on Africa, see Jerven, M., 2014.Africa:Why

EconomistsGetItWrong.London:ZedBooks.15 “Economics has an Africa problem”, Africa Is A Country, available at:

http://africasacountry.com/2015/02/economics-has-an-africa-problem/

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economicsthathadafocusonAfricaorhadthecontinentassubjectmatter.16Ireferredtothis

underrepresentationaseconomics’“Africaproblem”.Tomysurprise,thepiecereceivedalotof

attention particularly from U.S.-based economists. Some economists expressed shock at the

extentof theunderrepresentationwhileothers, especially themoreprominent voices in the

discipline who also had a large African research portfolio, suggested that Africans were

themselvestoblameforthisstateofaffairs.17

Thisessaycontinuestheconversationstartedbythatblogpostandextendsitinnewdirections.

First,IperformadeeperauditofnotonlytheeditorialboardsofleadingjournalsthathaveAfrica

asafocus(extendedto10)butalsoauditpatternsofauthorshipinthesejournalstofigureout

“whoiswritingaboutAfrica?”.Second,Idrawsomeimplicationsforeconomicsscholarshipof

theresultsofthisaudit.

16TheJournalofAfricanEconomies,JournalofDevelopmentEconomicsandJournalofEconomicGrowth.17Thisisabriefcollectionsomeofthecommentarythatfollowed:“Africaproblemineconomics”,byDavid

McKenziefortheWorldBankImpactEvaluationBlog,availableat:

http://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations/blog-links-february-20-understandability-replication-debate-

continues-thoughts-africa-problem;“Doeseconomicshavean‘Africaproblem?’”,MortenJervenforAfrican

Arguments,availableat:http://africanarguments.org/2015/02/13/does-economics-have-an-africa-problem-by-

morten-jerven/;“EconomicshasanAfricaproblem?”,ChrisBlattman,availableat:

https://chrisblattman.com/2015/03/24/economics-has-an-africa-problem/;“EconomicshasanAfricaproblem:

take3”,MarkusGoldsteinfortheWorldBankImpactEvaluationBlog,availableat:

http://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations/economics-has-africa-problem-take-3.

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1.2. Contributiontocontemporarydebates

Giveneconomists’ inabilitytopredictthe2007/2008globalfinancialcrisisandtheensuing,at

timesacrimonious,debateson theappropriatepolicy responsewhichexposedhow little the

professionknew18, there isnowadiscussionon theneed to reform theway thediscipline is

taught,especiallytoundergraduates,andthewayresearchisconducted.Thedebateto“rethink

economics”whichinitiallystartedoutasafringeissuenowseemstohavetakencenterstage

receiving coverage in such mainstream outlets as the Financial Times.19 Even the eminent

mainstream growth theorist Paul Romer,who incidentally is the new chief economist of the

WorldBank,hasrecentlyrebukedeconomistsfortheirextreme“mathiness”bywhichhemeans

theirall-to-oftenpracticeof letting“academicpolitics[or ideology]masqueradeasscience”.20

AngusDeaton, theeminentdevelopmenteconomistandNobel laureate,hasrecentlywritten

twoessaysessentiallymakingthepointthatthe“newdevelopmenteconomics”,withitsreliance

on“randomizedcontrolledtrials”andsophisticatedstatisticalmethods,isnotdelivering“deep

knowledge”beyondtellingus,forexample,that“villagers”innorthernZambiatendtosubstitute

mosquitonetsforfishingnetsiftheformerarehandedoutfree-of-charge.21Thecallistonow

18TheacrimonywithwhichthesedebateswereconductedistypifiedbytheexchangesbetweeneconomistsPaul

KrugmanthenatPrincetonUniversity,writingintheNewYorkTimes,andJohnCochraneoftheUniversityofChicago

writingonhispersonalblogTheGrumpyEconomist.19 “Crash and learn: should we change the way we teach economics?”, Financial Times, available at:

https://www.ft.com/content/0dc9b416-8573-11e6-8897-2359a58ac7a520 Romer, P.M., 2015. “Mathiness in the Theory of Economic Growth”,American Economic Review: Papers and

Proceedings,105(5):89–9321 Deaton, A., 2010. “Instruments, Randomization, and Learning about Development”. Journal of Economic

Literature, 48: 424 – 455 and Deaton, A. and Cartwright, N., 2016. “Understanding and Misunderstanding

RandomizedControlledTrials”.NationalBureauofEconomicResearchWorkingPaper22595

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make economics more pluralistic22, that is open it to other methods of knowing beyond

mathematicsandstatistics,andtomakeitmoreinterdisciplinary.23

Second,thereisnowanacknowledgementthateconomicshasagenderproblemparticularlyin

the U.S. where recent work has shown that relative to other disciplines, female academic

economists are underrepresented at the highest levels and fair worse than their male

counterpartsonmanyotheroutcomes.24Thenthereisthediscussionaroundeconomics’“race

problem”–arecognitionthatthediscipline’scurrentsetofmethodologicaltools,atleastthose

ofitsmainstreamvintage,arenotappropriatefordistillingAmerica’sstructuralracialiniquities.25

Theinappropriatenessofthetoolshasbeenarguedtopartlystemfromtheunderrepresentation

ofminoritiesatthehighestlevelsofthediscipline.26Itcomesasnosurprise,somemightsay,that

theinitiativeconfrontingeconomics’“raceproblem”isbeingspearheadedbyAfricanAmerican

economists.27

22Forexample,theCambridgeeconomistHa-JoonChangwantsmoreaspectsof“heterodox”economicstofeature

in undergraduate training while economic historian Morten Jerven wants more of history proper to guide

developmenteconomicsresearchonAfrica.23ThispointismadequitestronglyandeloquentlybyPikettyinCapital.24Cecietal.,2014.“WomeninAcademicScience:AChangingLandscape”.PsychologicalScienceinthePublicInterest,

15(3):75–14125SeeParramore,L.,2016.“Here’sWhatEconomistsDon’tUnderstandAboutRace”. InstituteforNewEconomic

Thinking, available at: https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/heres-what-economists-dont-

understand-about-race26Bayer,A.andRouse,C.E.,2016.“DiversityintheEconomicsProfession:ANewAttackonanOldProblem”.Journal

ofEconomicPerspectives,30(4):221–24227SomeoftheprominentAfrican-AmericaneconomistsspearheadingthisareDukeUniversity’sWilliamDarityand

DarrickHamiltonoftheNewSchoolforSocialResearch.

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Thelastsetofconversationsthatmyessayspeakstoisthemovementregainingtractionacross

muchof theGlobal Southon theneed to “decolonize”university curricula and research. For

example, students engaged in the #FeesMustFall movement in South Africa have made

“decolonization” an inseparable part of their call for free higher education in that country.

Whereasmostoftheactionanddebateistakingplacewithinthehumanitiesandsomesocial

sciences,economicsandthephysicalscienceshavenotbeensparedfromscrutiny.28

Myoverridingobjectivewith this essay is tohopefully start a conversationwithineconomics

similartotheonethathasbeentakingplacein“AfricanStudies”followingtheeventsofthe1969

AfricanStudiesAssociationmeetingsinMontreal,Canada.Atthatmeeting,theblackattendees

boycottedtheproceedings inprotestovertheunderrepresentationofblackacademics inthe

highestechelonsofthedisciplineaswellasprotestingtheEurocentricoutlookofmuchofthe

scholarship. Followingon fromthatmeeting, therehavebeenactiveattempts to redress the

deficitsidentifiedbytheblackacademiccaucuseventhoughthepaceappearsglacialtosome

observers,particularlyintheblack/Africanacademiccommunity.29Curiously,thisconversation

28 See Bassier, I., 2016. “UCT’s economics curriculum is in crisis”. GroundUp, available at:

http://www.groundup.org.za/article/ucts-economics-curriculum-crisis/; Chelwa, G., 2016. “Decolonizing the

teaching of economics”.Africa Is A Country, available at: http://africasacountry.com/2016/04/decolonizing-the-

teaching-of-economics/ ;Prescod-Weinstein,C.,2015.“DecolonisingSciencereadingList”.Medium,availableat:

https://medium.com/@chanda/decolonising-science-reading-list-339fb773d51f#.xwu5x5kpz29SeeOwomoyela,O.,1994.“WithFriendsLikeThese…ACritiqueofPervasiveAnti-AfricanismsinCurrentAfrican

StudiesEpistemologyandMethodology”.AfricanStudiesReview,37(3):77–101;Mkandawire,T.,1997.“TheSocial

SciencesinAfrica:BreakingLocalBarriersandNegotiatingInternationalPresence”.AfricanStudiesReview,40(2):15

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hasnever takenplace ineconomicsespeciallygiven thedisproportionate impactofNorthern

economicsresearchonpolicymakinginAfrica.30

2. DATAANDMETHOD

Inthissectionoftheessay,Idiscussinsomedetailthemethodusedtocollectthedataonwhich

theauditisperformed.

2.1. TheJournals

Asdiscussed in the introduction, theaudit isperformedon10 “leading” scholarly journals in

economicsthateitherexplicitlyfocusonAfricaand/orwhosesubjectmatterisofrelevanceto

thecontinent.“Relevance”isdeterminedbywhetherthejournalhasafocusondevelopment-

related topics including a focus on poverty, land, agriculture, economic history and general

economicpolicy,amongothers.Thedeterminationofwhetherajournal isa“leading”journal

dependsonitsrankingaccordingtoasimpleimpactfactorcalculationforalltheyearsthatthe

journal has been in existence. These are compiled and calculated by the IDEAS/RePEc

bibliographicdatabasewhich,asofOctober2016,rankedatotalof1,691journalsineconomics.

Thesimpleimpactfactoriscalculatedasthe“ratioofthenumberofcitationsbythenumberof

–36;Mama,A.,2007.“Is ItEthical toStudyAfrica?PreliminaryThoughtsonScholarshipandFreedom”.African

StudiesReview, 50(1): 1–26;Pailey,R.N., 2016. “Where is the ‘African’ inAfricanStudies”.AfricanArguments,

availableat:http://africanarguments.org/2016/06/07/where-is-the-african-in-african-studies/30Mkandawire,T.,2014.“ThespreadofeconomicdoctrinesandpolicymakinginpostcolonialAfrica”.African

StudiesReview,57(1):171–198

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items in the series”31 with a higher impact factor signaling influence among academics and

possiblyontheformulationofeconomicpolicy.32

Thiscriterionresultsinthe10journalslistedinTable1belowrankedaccordingtotheirsimple

impactfactorsaspertheIDEAS/RePEcdatabase.

Table1:The10JournalsTobeAudited

RankonIDEAS/RePEcoutof1,691Journals

NameofJournal SimpleImpactFactor

22 WorldBankEconomicReview 25

27 AmericanEconomicJournal:AppliedEconomics 22

36 JournalofDevelopmentEconomics 19

44 WorldBankResearchObserver 17

106 LandEconomics 8

133 AgricultureEconomics 7

135 WorldDevelopment 7

138 EconomicDevelopmentandCulturalChange 7

145 JournalofAfricanEconomies 6

Unranked AfricanEconomicHistory N/ASource:IDEAS/RePEcDatabase

Admittedly,thejournalsinTable1arearrivedatinarough-and-readyfashion.Ideally,onewould

wanttocompilethislistinamoresystematicmannerby,forexample,onlyconsideringthetop

10economics journalson the IDEAS/RePEcdatabase. Suchaprocedurewouldnot,however,

31Seemorehere:https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.journals.simple.html32Notwithstandingthestandardcriticismslevelledatimpactfactorsasameasureofinfluence.See“Hatejournal

impactfactors?Newstudygivesyouonemorereason”.ScienceMagazine,availableat:

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/07/hate-journal-impact-factors-new-study-gives-you-one-more-reason

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guaranteethatthejournalssocompiledwouldhavesufficientAfricacoverageorwouldcontain

topics of relevance to the continent. Therefore, the list in Table 1 is compiled in an eclectic

mannerat timesgoing for“bigname” journals like the JournalofDevelopmentEconomicsor

going for a leading journal in a particular subfield likeAgriculture Economics33or going for a

journalwithanexplicitfocusonAfricaliketheJournalofAfricanEconomies.Inanycase,allthe

journals in Table 1with the exception ofAfrican Economic History are ranked in the top 10

percentileofalleconomicsjournalsontheIDEAS/RePEcdatabase.Thesejournals,therefore,are

partoftheelitesetinthedisciplinewhosecontentnotonlyinfluencesfutureresearchbutalso

influenceseconomicpolicy.Anystudentofeconomics,particularlythestudentofdevelopment

economics,withaninterestinunderstandingthechallengesofAfricawillattheveryleastconsult

mostofthetitlesinTable1.

AfricanEconomicHistory(AEH)isnotrankedbecauseIDEAS/RePEcrequiresthatajournalhave

asizablenumberofarticlesforanimpactfactortobecomputed.Sinceitsinceptionin2004,the

journalhadonlypublished76articlesby2015.Inonethelessopttoaudititasopposedto,for

example, the Journal of EconomicHistorywhich is ranked on IDEAS/RePEc because ofAEH’s

explicitfocusonthecontinent.

A question that might arise is why focus on only 10 journals? The answer is simply one of

conveniencegiventhetediousandmanualnaturethroughwhichtheauditisperformed(see2.2.

33HereAgricultureEconomicsistheleadingjournalinthefieldofagricultureeconomicsbecauseithasthehighest

rankofanyjournalinthissubfieldontheIDEAS/RePEcdatabase.

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below).Inanycase,thenumberofindividualjournalarticlesthateventuallygetaudited,at5,356

articles,islargeenoughtoalmostguaranteethereproducibilityoftheresultsobtainedwhere

thenumberoftitlestobeextendedbeyondthe10consideredhere.34

2.2. Theaudit

ThemainfocusofthisessayistoconductanauditofpatternsofauthorshipofthetitlesinTable

1tofigureout“whoiswritingaboutAfricaineconomics”.Theauditproceedsasfollows.First,I

needtodeterminewhetheranindividualjournalarticleorpaperiswrittenonAfrica,whereAfrica

referstothe54countriesthatmake-uptheentirecontinent.35Inordertodothis,Ifollowthe

rulethatanarticleisclassifiedaswrittenonAfricaif:

(1)Ithastheword“Africa”initstitleand/oratleastoneAfricancountryismentionedin

itstitle;and/or

(2)Theword“Africa”appearsinthejournalarticle’sabstractand/oratleastoneAfrican

countryismentionedintheabstract;and/or

(3) The word “Africa” and/or at least one African country is listed in the journal’s

“keywords”section.36

34In“econospeak”,theauditisa“largen”study.35IabstractfromthecommonpracticeofsplittingupthecontinentintoNorthAfricaandSub-SaharanAfrica.36Notalljournalshavea“keywords”section.Butwhentheydo,ittendstoappearrightbelowtheabstract.

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OnceanarticleisclassifiedaswrittenonAfrica,thenextstepistoassignageographicallocation

fortheauthor(s)basedontheirself-declaredinstitutionalaffiliationatthetimeofthearticle’s

publication.Authorsareclassifiedas“African-based”iftheirinstitutionisinAfrica.Thosewhose

institutionisnotonthecontinentareclassifiedas“NotAfrican-based”withfurtherclassifications

for “NorthAmerican-based”, “European-based”or “other”.37 In theevent that anauthorhas

morethanoneaffiliationincludingoneinAfricaandanotheronein,forexample,Europe,then

theauthorisclassifiedas“African-based”irrespectiveofwhethertheAfricaninstitutionislisted

firstorlastbytheauthor.Bythisstandard,avisitingprofessorfromtheU.Sonsabbaticalatthe

UniversityofZambia(UNZA)wouldbecountedas“African-based”foraslongasUNZAwaslisted

asoneoftheauthor’sinstitutionsofaffiliation.Ifanauthorhasmorethanoneaffiliationin,for

example,NorthAmericaandEurope,thenthefirstlistedaffiliationistakenastheauthor’shome

affiliation.

Onequestionthatmightariseiswhyistheclassificationbasedongeographicallocationandnot

descentiftheobjectoftheauditistogetattheheartofthe“Africanvoices”debate?Inother

words,whynotfocusonwhetheranauthor isan“African”scholar(i.e.currently livesonthe

continentorisfromthecontinent)asopposedtousinggeography?Thelattercasemightleadto

thewrongfulattributionofan“Africanvoice” to thevisitingAmericanprofessoratUNZA.Or

perhapsdiscountingthe“voice”ofanAfricanpresentlyemployedatanAmericanorEuropean

university. Whereas the concern is valid, resolving it would require much more detailed

37TheNorthAmericaclassificationcoversboththeUnitedStatesofAmericaandCanada.Theclassification“other”

referstoallinstitutionsnotbasedineitherAfrica,NorthAmericaorEurope.

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informationthan isreadilyavailable.Forexample,downloadingandsiftingthrough individual

authors’curriculumvitaes(CVs).CVsareoftennotavailableonlineformanyauthorsandeven

when theyare, someauthorsopt tonot indicate theirnationalities. Inanycase, the“large”

numberofindividualjournalarticlesconsideredhereanddiscussedinSection3belowimplythat

these cases of what econometricians call “measurement error” are likely to be small and

hopefullyevenoutintheaggregate.38

Thecountingisdoneasfollows:AlljournalarticlesthathaveatleastoneAfrican-basedscholar

aregivenequalweightsof1regardlessofwhetherthearticleissingleauthored,lead-authored

ormerelyco-authoredbytheAfrican-basedscholar.This isdifferent fromtheapproachused

recentlybyBriggsandWeatherswho,intheirpaperauditingthepoliticsscholarshiponAfrica,

givegreaterweighttosole-authoredarticlesbyAfrican-basedscholars.39Lastly,iftheauthorsof

anarticleareallbased inAfrica, thenthatarticle is treatedas if itweresoleauthoredbyan

African-basedauthor.

TheauditisalsoextendedtotheeditorialboardsofthejournalsinTable1usingthegeographical

locationcriteriondetailedabove.

38 Inarecentexercisebut lookingatpoliticsscholarshiponAfrica,BriggsandWeathersuseasimilarmethodto

classifyauthorshipbasedonsimilarpracticalities.SeeBriggs,R.C.andWeathers,S.,2016.“GenderandLocationin

AfricanPoliticsScholarship:TheOtherWhiteMan’sBurden”.AfricanAffairs.39 For example, if a journal article has 3 authors andonly one of them is African-based, then the article gets a

weightingof1/3.Seeibid.

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3. RESULTS

Thissectionoftheessaypresentstheresultsoftheaudit.In3.1.Ireporttheresultsonpatterns

ofauthorshipandin3.2Ireporttheresultsoftheauditofeditorialboards.

3.1. Patternsofauthorship

InTable2,Ilistthetotalnumberofjournalarticlespublishedfrom2005to2015andreportthese

byjournal.40IalsoreportthenumberofjournalarticlesonAfricaandthe“Africashare”,thatis

thepercentageofthetotalwrittenonAfrica.

Table2:Numberofjournals,numberofjournalsonAfricaandAfricaShares,2005to2015

NameofJournal Articlesfrom2005to2015

ArticlesonAfrica

%oftotalonAfrica

JournalofAfricanEconomies 364 364 100%

AfricanEconomicHistory 66 66 100%

EconomicDevelopmentandCulturalChange 291 92 32%

WorldDevelopment 1794 539 30%

AgricultureEconomics 784 205 26%

WorldBankEconomicReview 247 41 17%

JournalofDevelopmentEconomics 995 144 14%

WorldBankResearchObserver 116 13 11%

AmericanEconomicJournal:AppliedEcon. 263 28 11%

LandEconomics 436 26 6%

TOTAL/AVERAGE 5356 1518 28%

40Iexcludeerratagiventhelikelihoodofdouble-counting.Bookreviewsarealsoexcluded.

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Thetotalnumberofjournalarticlespublishedfrom2005to2015inthe10journalsinTable2

was5,356andthetotalnumberonAfricawas1,518accountingfor28%ofthetotal.Thetwo

Africa-specificjournals,JournalofAfricanEconomies(JAE)andAfricanEconomicHistory(AEH),

naturallyhadthebiggestAfricashareoverthisperiod.Outsideofthesetwo,thebiggestAfrica

shareat32%wasfromEconomicDevelopmentandCulturalChangewiththelowestsharedueto

LandEconomicsat6%.WorldDevelopmenthadthehighestabsolutenumberofarticlesonAfrica

at539followedbyJAEwith364.Allinall,theinformationinTable2showsthatAfrica,atone-

thirdofthecoverage,isanimportanttopicofinquiryforthesejournals.

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TogetasenseofthedynamicsbehindtheinformationinTable2,IpresentFigure1thatshows

theevolutionintheAfricashareovertheperiod2005to2015.

Figure1:EvolutionofAfricaShare,2005to2015

FromFigure1weseethattheAfricasharestartedoffin2005at21%andthenstayedaroundthe

averageof28%from2006to2010.Thereafter,ithasbeenincreasinghoveringabovetheaverage

formostofthe2010to2015period.

Figure2presentswhatcanbethoughtofasthemainresultofthisessay.Thefigureshowsthat,

onaverage,only25%ofjournalarticlesonAfricahadat-leastoneAfrican-basedscholaroverthe

period2005to2015.Conversely,onaverage,75%of journalarticlesonAfricadidnothavea

singlescholarbasedonthecontinentovertheperiod2005to2015.

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Figure2:RepresentationofAfrican-basedscholars,2005to2015

Table3presentsthesameinformationasinFigure2butbyjournalandaveragedovertheperiod

2005 to 2015. The table also presents information on the Africa share taken from Table 2.

AgricultureEconomicsat41%hadthehighestpercentageofpapersonAfricahavingatleastone

African-basedauthor.TheWorldBankResearchObserver(WBRO)hadthelowestpercentageof

representationat0%. Inotherwords,noneof the journalarticles thatappearedonAfrica in

WBROfrom2005to2015hadanAfrican-basedauthor.Laterintheessay,Idiscussinsomedetail

theimplicationsofthisfindingespeciallygivenWBRO’scrucialroleofprovidingnon-technical

summariesof“researchbeingundertakenwithinthe[World]BankandoutsidetheBankinthe

areasofeconomics relevant fordevelopmentpolicy”.41Given its relativelyhigh impact factor

41See:http://wbro.oxfordjournals.org/

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(seeTable1),WBROsetsthetermsaboutwhat“we”knowordonotknowaboutaparticular

problemineconomicdevelopment.

Table3:Africasharesandrepresentationshares,2005to2015

NameofJournal%oftotalarticlesonAfrica

%withAtleastOneAfrican-basedAuthor

AgricultureEconomics 26% 41%

JournalofAfricanEconomies 100% 28%

LandEconomics 6% 28%

WorldDevelopment 30% 24%

AfricanEconomicHistory 100% 19%

EconomicDevelopment&CulturalChange 32% 16%

JournalofDevelopmentEconomics 14% 14%

WorldBankEconomicReview 17% 11%

AmericanEconomicJournal:AppliedEcon. 11% 10%

WorldBankResearchObserver 11% 0%

ThesharesofAfrican-basedscholarsintheAfrica-specificjournalsAEHandJAEwererespectively

19%and28%.These shares areworth keeping inmindwhen thinkingaboutwhetherAfrica-

focusedjournalsarethebestwaysoftacklingtheproblemofunderrepresentation.

RecallthatFigure2reportsthepercentageofarticlesonAfricathathaveat-leastoneAfrican-

basedauthorirrespectiveofwhethertheyareasole,leadorjustanordinaryco-authoronthe

paper.ItisusefultoknowthepercentageofpapersonAfricawhereAfrican-basedauthorsare

leadorsoleauthorsifonlybecausethesetwocategoriesaremeasuresofinfluenceorsignificant

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inputontheresearchitself.42InFigure3,Ireportthecombinedpercentageofsingleauthored

andlead-authoredpapersbyAfrican-basedauthors.IalsoreportfromFigure2,thepercentage

ofpaperswithat-leastoneAfrican-basedauthorregardlessofwhethertheauthorissole,lead

oramereco-author.

Figure3:LookingcloselyatLead/SoleAuthorship,2005to2015

42 Although, it appears that economics is unique in this respect. Author names on multi-authored papers in

economicstendtobearrangedalphabeticallyincontrasttootherdisciplineswhereorderingispresumablybased

oncontribution.Onestudyput theestimate for theprevalenceofalphabeticordering in five leadingeconomics

journals(noneofwhichareconsideredinthisessay)at85%.SeeEngers,M.,etal.,1999.“First-AuthorConditions”.

JournalofPoliticalEconomy,107(4):859–883

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InFigure3weseethatthemore“stringent”criterionofonlyconsideringsoleandleadauthored

papersgivesasmallerlevelofrepresentation:Onaverage,only15%ofjournalarticlesonAfrica

aresole-authoredorlead-authoredbyacademicsbasedonthecontinent.Inotherwords,only

examining the information in Figure 2 might lead to an overestimate of the degree

representation.Figure4reportsseparatelythepercentageofarticlesthataresoleauthoredand

leadauthoredbyAfrican-basedscholars.IalsoretaintheaggregatemeasuresfromFigure3for

purposesofcomparison.

Figure4:Breakingdownleadandsoleauthorship

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InFigure4weseethatsoleauthoredandleadauthoredpapersbyAfrican-basedscholarswere

publishedataboutthesamerateoverthisperiod.Theaverageshareofsoleauthoredandlead

authoredpapersasapercentageofthetotalwasabout8%inbothcases.Althoughthesharefor

soleauthoredpapersislikelybiasedupwardsgiventhewayIdefinesole-authorshipinthisessay

(seeSection2).What the information in Figure4 shows,however, is that itwasmuchmore

difficulttopublishsinglyorasaleadauthoronanAfricancountryinthejournalsinTable1ifyou

werebasedonthecontinent.

Recall fromFigure2 that, onaverage, 75%of journal articlesonAfricadidnothavea single

African-basedauthorovertheperiod2005to2015.Wethenmightwanttoknowhowthese

“spoilsofexclusion”aresharedbetweenNorthAmerica,Europeandotherpartsoftheworld.

ThisinformationiscontainedinFigure5.43

43RecallthatforpaperswithoutasingleAfrican-basedauthor,Iassignthegeographicallocationoftheleadauthor

(seefootnote42forcaveatsaroundtheinterpretationofauthorpositionalityineconomics).

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Figure5:SpoilsofExclusion,2005to2005

From the figure we observe that the “spoils” are mostly shared between North American

institutions(mostlyintheUS)andEuropeaninstitutions(mostlyintheUnitedKingdom,Germany

andScandinavia).Onaverage,halfofthepapersonAfricawithoutasingleAfrican-basedauthor

werewrittenbyNorthAmericanauthorswhiletheaverageforEuropewasslightlylessthanhalf.

Thecontributionofthecategory“Other”wasrelativelysmallat6%.44

44ThisismostlyAustralia,JapanandoneortwocountriesinAsiaandLatinAmerica.

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3.2. EditorialBoards

PerhapsonewayofmakingsenseoftheresultsinSection3.1istolookatthegeographicalmake-

upoftheeditorialboardsofthejournalsstudiedinthisessaygiventheevidencethateditorsdo

influencewhoandwhatgetspublishedineconomics.45Thissubsectionpresentsinformationon

thegeographicallocationoftheeditorialboardsofthejournalsinTable1asreportedbetween

May and October of 2016. Unfortunately, I cannot report the dynamic aspects of board

membershipsimplybecausejournalsdonotpubliclyreportinformationonpasteditorialboards.

Figure6reportstheresultsofclassifyingjournaleditorsaccordingtogeographicallocation–the

10 journals inTable1hadatotaleditorialboardmembershipof269.Thefigurealsoreports,

fromTable2,thepercentageofpaperswrittenonAfricapresentedasthebarinred(thefirst

bar). A rough criterion of “fairness” would be one where the editorial membership closely

reflectedthegeographicalcoverageofthejournals.However,inFigure6weseethatwhereas

aboutone-thirdofthepaperswereonAfrica,only3%oftheeditorialboardwasbasedonthe

continent.46The lion’sshareofeditorialboardmembershipbelongstoNorthAmerican-based

scholarsat69%.

45See:Laband,D.N.andPiette,M.J.,1994.“Favoritismversussearchforgoodpapers:empiricalevidenceregarding

thebehaviorofjournaleditors”.JournalofPoliticalEconomy,102(1):194–203;Hodgson,G.M.andRothman,H.,

1999.“TheEditorsandAuthorsofEconomicsJournals:ACaseofInstitutionalOligopoly”.TheEconomicJournal,109

(453): 165 – 186; Innes, R., 2008. “Editorial Favoritism”. Unpublished Working Paper. Available at:

http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/A/bo10444942.html46OnecritiqueofthiscomparisonisthatIamcomparingadynamicaveragewithastaticone.Thatis,Iamcomparing

anaveragetakenover10yearswithonefromasingleyear.Butevenifwelimitedthedynamicaveragetopapers

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Figure6:Editorialboardmembership,2015

InFigure7,IcastthespotlightontheeditorialmembershipofthetwoAfrica-focusedjournals

AfricanEconomicHistory(AEH)andJournalofAfricanEconomies(JAE).WeseefromtheFigure

thatbothAEHand JAE fall shortofmy“fairness”criterion.Theybothdedicate100%of their

coveragetothecontinentandyettheeditorialboardsofAEHandJAEhaverespectively14%and

7%oftheireditorsbasedonthecontinent.Thisputsinperspectivetheargumentthatintroducing

moreAfrica-focusedjournalsistheantidotetothecrisisofunderrepresentation.

publishedin2015orinthetwoorthreeyearsleadingupto2015,theconclusionwouldstillremain.Ifanything,

thingswouldworsenbythisroughcriterionof“fairness”.

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Figure7:EditorialboardmembershipofAEHandJAE,2015

AnotherinterestingtalkingpointfromFigure7istheapparentrelationshipbetweenajournal’s

geographicalhomeandthegeographicalmake-upofitseditorialboard.AEHwhichisbasedin

NorthAmerica (at theUniversityofWisconsin)has86%of itseditorialboardbased inNorth

America.NoneofitseditorialboardisbasedinEurope.JAE,whichisbasedatOxfordUniversity,

hasmorethanhalfofitseditorialboardbasedinEurope,farexceedingtheaverageforEurope

reportedinFigure6.

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4. IMPLICATIONS

In his 2015 book surveying the last 3 decades of the economics scholarship on Africa, the

economichistorianMortenJervenarguesthat“economistscontinuetogetAfricawrong”47with

the result that “[economic] growth in Africa has been misunderstood, and as a result the

disciplineofeconomicsiscurrentlyunabletogiveusefulpolicyadvice,letalonesimplyexplain

whatishappeningrightnow.”48Mycontentioninthisessayisthatonecannotfullyappreciate

thecritiquesofthelikesofJervenwithoutsomereferencetothedatapresentedintheprevious

sectionof this essay. Tobe sure,African scholars like thedistinguishedMalawian economist

ThandikaMkandawirehaveoftenspokenabouttheunderrepresentationof“Africanvoices”and

how this impacts scholarship.49 These statements have, however, often been anecdotal and

madeinreferencetothegeneralstateofsocialscienceresearchaboutthecontinent.Whatthis

essaydoesisobtainaprecisetriangulationoftheabsenceof“Africanvoices”withspecificfocus

oneconomics.

Before concluding the essay, I would like to highlight four direct implications for economics

researchandeconomicpolicythathavebeendiscernedfrommyworkperusingthemorethan

1,500 individual journal articles onAfrica that I had to consult in collecting the evidence for

Section3.

47Jerven,M.2015.Africa:WhyEconomistsGetItWrong,p248Ibid.,p8–949 See Mkandawire, T., 1997. “Social Sciences in Africa: Breaking Local Barriers and Negotiating International

Presence”,AfricanStudiesReview,40(2):15–36

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4.1. FauxConsensus

Goodeconomicpolicyshouldbepredicatedonconsensus.MuchofAfrica’spolicymakinghas,

however,beenbasedonthe“consensusofthefew”.Thenowwidelyacknowledgedmistakesof

theStructuralAdjustmentyears50were theresultofa typeofconsensus-drivenpolicymaking

thatwaspreservedfortherevolvingdoorbetweenInternationalFinancialInstitutions(IFIs)and

Northernuniversities.OneofthelinchpinsofStructuralAdjustmentPolicies(SAPs)inAfricawas

theneedtoscalebackthestate.ThisfeatureofSAPsdrewitsinspirationfromscholarlyworkby

“[academics] based in North American universities and [was] immediately embraced by the

World Bank as it developed its political-economic analysis of African policymaking”.51 As the

writingonSAPsbyMkandawireandSoludoshows,suchpitfallsmighthavebeenavoidedhadthe

circleofconsensusbeenextendedtoincludevoicesonthecontinent.52

Themodusoperandiofthe“consensusofthefew”,however,seemstobecarryingonunabated.

A recent special edition of the journalWorld Development on the rather important topic of

industrializationandstructuraltransformationinAfricadidnothaveasinglecontributorfrom

thecontinent.53AndasreportedinSection3,allthepapersonAfricaintheWorldBankResearch

50SeeOstry,J.D.,etal.2016.“Neoliberalism:Oversold?”.FinanceandDevelopment,53(2).51Mkandawire,T.andSoludoC.C.,1999.OurContinent,OurFuture:AfricanPerspectivesonStructuralAdjustment.

Trenton:AfricanWorldPress,p.2452Ibid.53McMillan,M.S.andHeady,D.(Eds).,2014.“EconomicTransformationinAfrica”,WorldDevelopment,63:1–

124

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Observer,ajournalwhoseprimarypurposeistosynthesizeresearchfindingsforthepurposesof

policy,didnothaveasingleAfrican-basedauthor.

4.2. HegemonicTheories

The point of departure for scholarly enquiry into “policy failure” in Africa are the dominant

frameworksof‘neopatrimonialism’andthe‘publicchoiceschool’that“pointtowardsomeform

ofmalevolentstatesimplyactingonbehalfof,oratthebehestof,rulinginterests”.54Thepublic

choiceapproachtopolicyfailurehasinspiredmanymindsworkingonAfricasinceRobertBates

published his Markets and States in Tropical Africa.55 For its part, neopatrimonialism is

consideredindispensableformakingsenseofpolicymakingduringtheSAPyears.Thego-tobook

formanyeconomistsandpoliticalscientistsonSAPsisNicolasvandeWalle’sAfricanEconomies

andthePoliticsofPermanentCrisis.56VandeWalle,workingfirmlywithintheneopatrimonial

framework,reachestheratherincredibleconclusionthatSAPswereneverreallyimplementedin

Africabecausedoingsowouldhavejeopardizedtheinterestsoftherulingelites.Inspiteofthe

voluminousliteraturethathasdetailedtheimplementationofSAPsacrossthecontinent57,van

54Mkandawire,T.,2015.“NeopatrimonialismandThePoliticalEconomyofEconomicPerformanceinAfrica:

CriticalReflections”.WorldPolitics,67(3),p56755Bates,R.H.,1981.MarketsandStatesinTropicalAfrica:ThePoliticalBasisofAgriculturalPolicies.Berkeley:

UniversityofCaliforniaPress56VandeWalle,2001.AfricanEconomiesandthePoliticsofPermanentCrisis,1979–1999.Cambridge:Cambridge

UniversityPress57See,forexample,Mkandawire,TandSoludo,C.C.,1999.OurContinent,OurFutureandMkandawire,T.and

Soludo,C.C.(Eds),2003.AfricanVoicesonStructuralAdjustment:ACompanionToOurContinent,OurFuture.

Trenton:AfricanWorldPress

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deWalle’s book is highly favourably cited and is required reading in leading economics and

politicscoursesintheNorth.58

4.3. TheConfluenceofResearchonSomeQuestions

OnestrikingfeatureabouttheeconomicsscholarshiponAfricaisthepreponderanceofresearch

onHIV/AIDS,conflictandcorruption.There isobviouslya“demand” for this typeof research

giventhatthecontinenthashistoricallycarriedafairburdenoftheseunfortunateills.However,

giventrade-offsinherentintheresearchprocess,havinglotsofresearchonconflictorcorruption

impliesthatwearenotlearningaboutother,perhapsequallyimportant,matters.Forexample,

oneofthemostsociallyandeconomicallydisruptiveepisodesinrecentAfricanhistoryhasbeen

theeraofSAPs.Sadly,weknowlittle,atleastaseconomists,aboutthemediumtolong-term

impactsofSAPpoliciesonvarioussocialandeconomicoutcomes.Further,importantresearch

questionsareoftenconceptualizedinwaysthatdonotfacilitatedeeplearning.Forexample,the

economichistorianMortenJervenhaspointedoutthatthestandardresearchquestioningrowth

economicsonAfricahasbeen“whydidAfricanotgrow?”asopposedto“whyhasAfricagrown

atcertaintimesandthensloweddownatothertimes?”.59Thepolicyimplicationsofthesecond

questionareprofound.

58ThebookfeaturesprominentlyonChrisBlattman’s“PoliticalEconomyofDevelopmentCourse”atColumbia

University.Blattmanconsidersthebooktobe“oneof[his]favoritebooksonAfricanPoliticalEconomy”.See:

http://chrisblattman.com/2007/12/09/dear-donors-please-stop-helping-us/59Jerven,M.,2015.Africa:WhyDoEconomistsGetItWrong?

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4.4. TheLimitsof“Data”

InPoorNumbersMortenJervenmarshalstheevidencetoshowthatAfricanstatisticaldata is

plaguedby“systematicvariationinerrorsandbiases”andwarnsthat“themostbasicmetricof

development,GrossDomesticProduct(GDP),shouldnotbetreatedasanobjectivenumberbut

ratherasanumberthatisaproductofaprocessinwhicharangeofarbitraryandcontroversial

assumptionsaremade”.60ThisisworthbearinginmindparticularlygiventheresultsofSection

3thatexemplifywhatJervenelsewheredescribesastheever“increasingdistancebetweenthe

observedandtheobserver”ineconomicsresearchonAfricawhere“analystsincreasingly[make]

useofdownloadabledatasetstotesteconometricmodels”61.AphenomenonBrankoMilanovic

describesas“Wikipediawith[statisticalanalysis]”.62

60Jerven,M.,2013.PoorNumbers:HowWeAreMisledByAfricanDevelopmentStatisticsAndWhatToDoAboutIt.

Ithaca:CornellUniversityPress61Jerven,M.,2015.Africa:WhyEconomistsGetItWrong,p12062 Milanovic, B. 2014. “My take on the Acemoglu-Robinson critique of Piketty”. Available at:

http://glineq.blogspot.com/2014/08/my-take-on-acemoglu-robinson-critique.html

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5. CONCLUSION

ThisessayhasprovidedsomeofthefirstevercomprehensiveestimatesofwhatIhavedescribed

elsewhere as economics’ “Africa problem”. About 75% of the papers published on Africa in

leadingeconomicsjournalsdidnothaveasingleAfrican-basedauthorovertheperiod2005to

2015.ThismeasureofunderrepresentationworsenswhenIexcludethosepaperswhereAfrican-

basedscholarsweremereco-authors.Overtlymissingfromthisessayisadeepdiscussionofthe

likelycausesoftheresultsdiscussedinSection3.Suchadiscussionwouldhoweverrequirethe

gatheringofmuchmoreinformationthanthatpresentedhere.Ifanything,thehopeisthat,ina

smallway,thisessaysparksalongoverdueconversationaboutthepoliticsandimplicationsof

thepatternsofknowledgeproductionineconomicsonAfrica.Onceconfrontedwiththeresults

inSection3,itisdifficulttothinkaboutanythingelse–toparaphraseRobertLucas’famousquote

oneconomicdevelopment.63

63Lucas,R.E.,1988.“OnTheMechanicsofEconomicDevelopment”.JournalofMonetaryEconomics,22:p5