Authors: Spyros Repousis, Petros Lois

Title: Innovation Performance and Development Assistance and Growth in South East European Member States

Abstract

The purpose of this chapter is to examine the impact of international development assistance on economic growth in the case of four Southeast European member states, Croatia, Estonia, Lithuania, Slovenia, that fall into two different innovation performance groups, during a maximum time period of 16 years (1995-2010), by following a behavioural equation of flows, not an accounting identity.

Foreign aid as additive to domestic savings is expected to cause an increase in economic growth and domestic savings. Surprisingly, our empirical results do not support this hypothesis. We have shown that both international net official development assistance and official aid received, as well as net bilateral aid flows from DAC donors, have no statistically significant effect on Gross Domestic Savings into two different innovation performance groups. In all four European member states, with different innovation performance, only per capita Gross Domestic Product is statistically significant. These results are consistent with the notion that foreign aid transfers can distort individual incentives, and hence hurt savings and growth, by encouraging rent-seeking as opposed to productive activities.

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The International Conference on Business & Economics of the Hellenic Open University (ICBE - HOU) aims to bring together leading scientists and researchers, affiliated with the HOU, to present, discuss and challenge their ideas opinions and research findings about all disciplines of Business Administration and Economics.

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