Melakuu Abebe
Melakuu Abebe
Melakuu Abebe
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
DECEMBER, 2023
FITCHE, ETHIOPIA
Table of Contents page
ACRONYMS.................................................................................................................................III
CHAPTER ONE..............................................................................................................................1
1. INTRODUCTION.......................................................................................................................1
CHAPTER TWO.............................................................................................................................7
2. LETRATURE REVIEW..............................................................................................................7
1
2.2 EMPIRICAL LETRATURE................................................................................................11
CHAPTER THREE.......................................................................................................................14
3.4 Description and expected sign of the variables used in the analysis....................................15
Heteroskedasticity Test...................................................................................................19
CHAPTER FOUR..........................................................................................................................20
REFERENCE.................................................................................................................................22
2
ACRONYMS
3
CHAPTER ONE
1. INTRODUCTION
This issues surrounding budget deficit are not certainly new, but the economic development of
the past decades has led to renewed interest in the fiscal themes. Government budget deficit is a
perennial topic of debate among policy makers. Traditional view of government deficit taken by
most economist said that when government runs a budget deficit and issues deficit. It reduces
national saving which in turn lead to lower investment and a larger foreign debt. This view
concludes that government debt places burden on future generation. While Ricardian view of
government deficits stress that budget deficits merely represent a substitution of future taxes for
current taxes. Budget deficit of government may affect a nation’s role in the world economy
(Mankiw ,2007).
4
In recent years government spending in least developed countries (LDCs) has increased
significantly. This is mainly attributed to the fact that the governments of LDCs are involved in
social, political and economic affairs. Meanwhile revenues do not grow rapidly in the same
proportion as expenditure due to narrow taxes basis and efficient tax collection of systems
resulting in a budget deficit. In industrial countries, too, the failure of market mechanism in
1930’s (during great depression) calls for government intervention in the economy paving the
way for increased government expenditure in those countries. Despite the consensus on the need
to reduce budget deficit, LDCs offer wide range of expenditure with budget deficit. For country
to country budget led to high and variable inflation with crowding out of investment and growth.
While in some countries moderately high budget deficit seems not to generate macroeconomic
imbalance at all. The explanation for these different outcomes is that different governments
adopt different techniques of financing their deficits. Thus, the consequences of fiscal deficit
depend on the way they are financed (William easterly, 2010/08 and Mankiw, 2007).
In an effort to escape sever poverty in developing countries like Ethiopia the role of government
in the economy is indispensable because government engages on building roads, different power
generating plant, communication facilities, schools and health facilities. However; government is
constrained by under developed financial sector, high informal sectors, erratic nature of the tax
collection (Adunya, 1997) and (Yemane, 2008). This in turn enlarge the gap between
government expenditure and revenue receipt then leads to large and persistent budget deficit
which is possibly linked to monetary expansion, inflation reduced competitiveness of domestic
producers (appreciation of real exchange rate) and eventually runs to trade and current account
deficit.
Ethiopia faces big budget deficit. The combined effect of a very rapid increase in expenditure
and a relatively slower increase in revenue is obviously increase governments budget deficit. The
Ethiopian government fiscal position has showed a significant change over the last four decades.
The government budget, which was in surplus in the 1950s and 1960s, has adapted to continuous
and growing deficit (MEDaC, 1999; Berhanu and Befekadu 1999/2000). Compared to other
African countries like Kenya, Zimbabwe and Burundi, the overall deficit including grant as
percentage of GDP is among the highest. Although domestic financing is equally important
source of financing, the switch to foreign ones in fear of negative consequences like inflation,
however, has resulted in growing debt burden, which was averaged to 96.9 percent of GDP over
the period 2001/01 to 2002/03. In Ethiopia it is quite clear that the government budget balance
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has never been in surplus since the 1970s. Moreover, the extent of the deficit has undergone
significant changes over the different periods. During the period 1955-65 balanced budgets were
maintained more or less while between 1965-74 deficits were kept small as the result of fiscal
conservatism. Afterwards a large and persistently rising fiscal deficit was sustained. The budget
deficit has also remained significant even after the introduction of various reform programs in
1992/93. In 1999/00 government expenditure was around 32 percent of GDP while total
government revenue was 19.4 percent of GDP. Abinet Gebrekidan 234 This clearly indicates that
there is an excess of government expenditure over revenue, which leads to a huge budget deficit.
In 1998/99 and 1999/00 this fiscal deficit increased to 9.6 percent and 13.6 percent of GDP,
respectively. This is due to the breakout of war with Eritrea in 1998 and the natural disaster in
the same year. In 2000/01 this figure decreased to 8.2 percent of GDP. Based on updated
estimates, in 2003/04 the fiscal deficit (including grants) is likely to be about 4.8 percent of
GDP. In nominal terms, revenue surpassed the program target because of strong indirect tax
receipts stemming from buoyant import growth and improved customs administration, which
more than offset lower-than-projected direct taxes that reflected weak corporate profits following
the drought of 2001/02. Moreover, donors provided more external grants and less project loans,
given the vulnerable debt situation. The external current account deficit (including grants) is
estimated to narrow to 4 percent in 2003/04. However, deficits had been financed from both
external and domestic sources. External sources include external borrowing and grants while
domestic sources include borrowing from banking system and non-banking sources. 2.3.
External Debt The poor performance of the Ethiopian economy has made external assistance a
prominent feature of the country’s economic structure. Since 1974, at which Ethiopia applied for
loan from the IMF, the country has frown more and more dependent on external assistance and
has reached a stage where it cannot function without it (Berhanu and Befekadu, 1999/2000).
Ethiopia’s external debt has changed significantly in its magnitude, structure and composition
over the last quarter of the 20th century. To put it in a historical context, the size of the debt and
its composition has changed since the mid 1970s. During the Imperial regime the size of the debt
was modest. The magnitude of the debt in 1975 when the Imperial regime fell was only USD 371
million. But by the end of 1991, it reached USD 8790 million. More than half (USD 4744
million or 54 percent) of the total debt was contracted for defence purposes. Consequently, the
major share (74.6 percent) of the debt was owed for bilateral creditors in which the Former
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Soviet Union alone accounted for about 78 percent of the total bilateral debt. In contrast to the
composition of the present debt, the share of Multilateral Institutions in the total debt was only
16.8 percent during the previous regime (Teklu, 2000). In general budget deficit is increase from
time to time (Befekadu Degefe, Berhanu Nega, Getahun Tafesse, 200/01).
The annual increase in the federal budget is a key manifesto of this approach. As a result, the
deficit is increasing debt and it is a heavy burden, and inflationary money printing has become
the norm. This adds up to a considerable economic risk. The deficit for fiscal year that began in
July 2016 doubled to 60 billion birr as revenue and grants growth was outpaced by expenditure.
While income increased by 10% to 269 billion birr, expenditures expanded by 21% to 329 billion
birr. The spending budget for the financial year that just ended was 321 billion birr. With an
ambitious tax-collection target, the budget deficit was 54 billion birr. Additional spending of 14
billion birr was requested during the fiscal year without identifying plausible revenue sources.
The government apparently has not learned any lessons from the preceding years under
performance in collection and the consequent gaping deficits. For this budget year, which began
on July 8, the spending budget increased by 3.6 percent to 347 billion birr. Although that
represent a slower rate of spending growth, despite last year huge underachievement in tax
collection, revenue from local sources is budgeted to increase by 6.6 % to 236 billion birr-this is
not credible. Regardless, the budget was approved by parliament without serious debate.
Attaining a sound macroeconomic balance has become a priority of industrial and developing
country economies in the measurement of government success. Ethiopia has a long economic
history characterized by macroeconomic imbalance, one of which the gap between government
spending and revenue. It is perceived that a larger deficit always signifies a more expansionary
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fiscal policy. But that is not always true, because during recession as GDP falls, the
government’s most important source of tax revenue; income taxes, corporate taxes, and payroll
taxes all shrink because firms and people pay lower taxes when they earn less (Carlos. R 2003).
According to Sill (2012) the expenditure of an entity, which exceeds the earning or income it has
termed as budget deficit. In the absence of financing from external source the deficit carry
forward to next financial year. The deficit can be a result of delays in collection of the revenues
i.e. Sales, taxes other macroeconomic variables represents one of the most widely debated topics
among economists. Ethiopians budget deficit has been increasing over time. For instance, the
overall fiscal balance in Ethiopia has moved from surplus in the early 1950 to a balance budget
up to the mid- 1960 and rather small deficit in 1964 to 1974. Following the 1974 revolution the
government of Ethiopia increased its participation in economic activities through nationalization
of private enterprises this leads to the country to large budget deficit (National Bank of Ethiopia
annual reports,1980).
Hence, the study attempts to observe the determinants of budget deficit in Ethiopia. Our research
contributes to fill the research gap on the determinant of budget deficit in Ethiopia. This type of
paper has been ever conducted in the case of our country used some variable like; real GDP
annual growth rate, inflation rate, real exchange rate, real GDP per capital and real interest rate.
Even if the various factors (determinants) of budget deficit of Ethiopia is addressed in different
period, our paper is different from other by including External debt. The Study also analyzes the
significance of each determinant of budget deficit and their implication on the Ethiopia economy
by using both econometric method and descriptive methods of analysis using the data from the
period 1985 to 2021. Finally, the study attempts to find out the significant determinants of
budget deficit in Ethiopia and will be arrive at the concluding remarks.
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1.4 Objective of the Study
9
CHAPTER TWO
2. LETRATURE REVIEW
This chapter covers theoretical and empirical literature review related to the study. In order to
provide suitable theories and empirical evidence on the topic investigation, the researcher has
reviewed a number of existing literature; these are helps to explain some key terms, which will
be relevant to the study and the researcher has also reviewed other researchers discussion related
to the study area.
The Neoclassical school proposes an adverse relationship between budget deficits and
macroeconomic variables. They argue that budget deficits lead to higher interest rates,
discourages the issue of private bonds, private investments, and private spending, increases
inflation level, and cause a similar increase in the current account deficits and finally slows the
growth of the economy through resources crowding out. The standard neoclassical model has
three central features. First, the consumption of each individual is determined as the solution to
an inter-temporal optimization problem, where both borrowing and lending are permitted at the
market rate of interest. Second, individuals have finite lifespans. Each consumer belongs to a
specific cohort or generation, and the lifespans of successive generations overlap. Third, market
clearing is generally assumed in all periods. Rising interest rates stimulate additional saving and
reduce investment until market equilibrium is reestablished. Thus, persistent government deficits
crowd out private capital accumulation.
The Keynesian economists propose a positive relationship between budget deficits and
macroeconomic variables. They argue that usually budget deficits result in an increase in
domestic production, increases aggregate demand, increases savings and private investment at
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any given level of interest rate. In the Mendel Fleming framework, an increase in the budget
deficit would induce an upward pressure on interest rate, causing capital inflows and an
appreciation of the exchange rate that will increase the current account balance.
Changes in the general price level, income and population size determine growth of government
spending while tax administration and income determine the growth of government revenue and
the imbalances growth of the two(spending over revenues) causes budget
deficit(http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz118062182kap.pdf). While Shibeshi (1992) has identified
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fiscal indiscipline aligned with structural variables as a major factor underlying the expansion of
fiscal deficit.
Taylor's (1988) on the other hand tried to explain the reasons why government is open to high
fiscal deficits by forwarding three arguments. First, a government deliberately favors high
spending and lower taxes for political reasons to make there governance legitimate and this view
are known as the view of political deficit. Second, it is argued that structural factors like fall in
term of trade (TOT), export supply and their price fluctuations etc. Aggravate the growth of
public sector deficit; this view is called the structural view. The third view, on the other hand,
argues that inflation reduces real tax revenue and thus causes high fiscal deficit. This is called the
inflationary approach to fiscal deficit.
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system. Furthermore, if the exchange rate and the interest rates are subject to government
control, resorting to domestic financing has a more crowd out effect on private sector and
translates in to credit rationing.
Budget deficit may also accrue due to inflation. But, the direct link of the case can be
problematic. Reversed causation can be established for instance monetization of deficit may
prove to be inflationary. On the other hand, in economies where there is inflation there is
pressure for running budget deficits. This is because, taxes collection exhibits collection lags that
when there is inflation the real balance of tax revenue would decrease at the collection.
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2.2 EMPIRICAL LETRATURE
This section summarizes the major empirical findings of different previous studies. It is known
that fiscal deficit adversely affect the economic structure and this impact depends on the way of
financing. Generally, to analyze budget deficit and related issues ten case studies will be taken
out of fifty nine countries (LDCs and DCs) and econometric estimation will be applied to each
cases. The ten countries are Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Coetdivore, Ghana, Mexico, Morocco,
Pakistan, Thailand and Zimbabwe. The reason for choosing them is because of their
representative of the developing worlds and their diverse fiscal and macro experiences (Rodger,
1994).
The study concludes that the simple correlation between fiscal deficit and individual indicator of
macroeconomic imbalances (interest, inflation etc.) are weak to nonexistent. This is clearly due
to the application of different mechanisms that each country relies to finance its deficit.
However, the study found strong negative correlations between deficit and growth. The study
also examined the degree to which deficit are affected by external shocks(foreign exchange,
commodity price fluctuation and foreign interest rates or by domestic macroeconomic
variables(inflation, domestic interest rate, real exchange rates)) and found that only in Colombia,
more than 50% of the variation in deficit was explained by foreign shocks, but in Chile, Ghana
and Zimbabwe foreign shocks do not seems to explains the direct variation the Oliver Tansy
effect by inflation lower tax revenue are seen only in Ghana, Colombia, Thailand and Zimbabwe.
Revenue from money creation associated with inflation was found in Thailand and Argentina.
An additional percentage in GDP from money creation induces by 5% additional: inflation in
Thailand and 97% inflation in Argentina (ibid).
Karras (1994) studies the relationship between budget deficits and macroeconomic variables in a
cross sectional study involving 32 countries for the period 1950-1980, by using OLS and GLS.
He found out that deficits do not lead to inflation, they are negatively correlated with rate of
growth of real output and increased deficits appear to retard investment. Nelson and Sing (1994)
used data on cross section of 70 developing countries during two time period, 1970-1979 and
1980-1989, to investigate the effects of budget deficits on GDP growth rates. They estimated the
relationship between growth (GDP growth rate) and the public policy variables using ordinary
least squares (OLS) method. Their study concluded that the budget deficits have no significant
effect on the economic growth of those nations in the 1970 and 1980s.
( Rodger: 2002). Econometric analysis is the relationship between budget deficit and economic
growth in Colombia. The study concludes that the simple correlation between fiscal deficit and
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individual indicators of macroeconomic imbalances (interest, inflation etc) are weak to non-
existent. This is clearly due to different mechanism that each country relies to finance its deficit.
However, the study found strong negative correlations between deficit and growth. The study
also examined the degree to which deficit are affected by external shocks (foreign exchange,
commodity price fluctuation and foreign interest rates or by domestic macroeconomic variables
(inflation, domestic interest rates, real exchange rates) and found that only in Colombia, more
than 50% of the variation in deficit was explained by foreign shocks.
Ahmad (2013), investigates the relation between Budget Deficit and Gross Domestic Product of
Pakistan using a time series data for the period of 1971-2007.Ordinary least square methodology
is employed. ADF test has been used to check the stationary of the data. All variables get
stationary at 5% level of significance at level. The results of Granger causality test show that
there is bi-directional causality running from budget deficit to GDP and GDP to budget deficit.
Njenga (2013) investigates the effects of budget deficits on selected macroeconomic variables in
Kenya for the period 1980-2010. Co-integration and Error Correction Models were used as the
econometric techniques. Causality relationship was also established and Wald test utilized.
Results suggest that Current GDP, balance of payment and private investments rates are
significant determinants of budget deficit. Result also indicates a long run equilibrium
relationship between budget deficit and these macroeconomic variables. The Granger causality
test revealed that the twin deficit hypothesis in Kenya is not supported by this study.In the past
the Thailand government usually ran a budget deficit. But in recent years the deficit has become
a surplus because tax capacity relative to GDP has increased significantly and expenditure over
revenues were also reduced. The evidence from the country show that the government adopted
non-inflationary, means of deficit financing more relaying on domestic borrowing through
bonds. Evidence also shows that there is no clear relationship between inflation and seignorage
in the country(Ramangkuria,1991)
Genius murwera pachena (2013); He examine the impact of selected macroeconomic variables
on budget deficits in South Africa. According to him, vector auto-regression model was used to
estimate the respective impact of unemployment, economic growth, foreign reserves, foreign
debt, and government investment consumption on the budget deficit. The analyses covered the
period 1980 to 2010 using time series annual data.Teshome Ketema (2006) the impact of
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government spending on economic growth: in the case of Ethiopia. He used both descriptive and
econometrics analysis and also used various components of government spending (investment,
consumption and human capital expenditure) on the growth of real GDP for the period (1960/61-
2003/04) by using Johansen Maximum likelihood Estimation procedure.
Tewolde Girma H.M (2013), has been examined the effect of budget deficit on monetary
aggregates and the foreign sector of Ethiopia using the Vector Error Correction Model over the
period 1970/71 to 2010/11. Estimation result shows the existence of fairly significant
relationship between fiscal deficit, monetary aggregates and the foreign sector in Ethiopia.
Budget deficit is at the root of monetary expansion. Monetary expansion intern contributes
positively to rising inflation and overvalued exchange rate. The Inflation and overvalued
exchange rate intern contributes to the low performances of the foreign sector through adversely
affecting export incentive. Fiscal deficit for small open economy like Ethiopia is also sign of
stimulated domestic import demand, because government not only spends on goods and services
produced in domestic economy. Thus, the result is in favor of the twin deficit hypothesis
therefore fiscal restraint bucked by export diversification will improve the performance of the
foreign sector and status of inflation.
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CHAPTER THREE
This study will aims at establishing the determinant of budget deficit in Ethiopia.My study will
intends to use secondary time series data collecte from different sources for the period from
1985-2018. Hence, the data for determinant of budget deficit variables are; real gross domestic
product per capital, Real Growth Domestic Product Annual Growth rate, Inflation rate and
External Debt will be obtaine from Ministry of Finance and Development (MOFED), Central
Statistics Authority (CSA), National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) and other sources.
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CBIi= central bank independence
LRGDPi= the log of real per capita GDP
URBi=the degree of urbanization
AGRIi=the share of agriculture in the GDP
ILLYi= the ratio of liquid liabilities of the financial system to GDP
OPENi=the trade openness
Following the model specified by Cambes and Saadi-Sedik the budget deficit model of this study
can be specifie by using four most important determinant variables that determine budget deficit,
such variables are inflation rate, the real GDP annual growth rate, External Debt and real per
capital GDP as explanatory variables and budget deficit as dependent variable. The linear
functional relationship between explanatory variable and dependent variables as follows:
BDt= f (RGDPt, GRGDPt, EXDt, IRt ,Ut )
The linear equation is therefore,
BDi = BO+ B1RGDPt + B2GRGDPt+ B3EXDt+B4IRt+ Ui
Where t=denotes time, Ui random term
BDt = denotes the government budget deficit
RGDPt=the real GDP per capital at time t
GRGDPt= the real GDP annual growth rate at time t
EXDt= external debt at time t
IRt=inflation rate at time t
B0 = the value of budget deficit when explanatory variables are zero
3.4 Description and expected sign of the variables used in the analysis
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3.4.2 Explanatory variables
Explanatory variable is the one that explains change in dependent variables. It can be anything
that might affect the response variable. From this study the explanatory variable will include in
the model due to the reason that discusse below;
LRGDP (Real GDP per capital); is introduced in the function to indicate the level of economic
development ,so higher level of income per capital reflecting a higher level of development is
held to indicate greater capacity to levy and collect taxes (Mankiw, 7 th, 2007). This is true
concerning the management and efficiency of public expenditures. Moreover, according to
Roubini (1991), the GDP per capital may capture some socio political effects if social conflicts
are more important in poor countries. The GDP per capital is positive.
GRGDP; (Real GDP annual growth rate); is include in the model as a proxy for economic
activity because government budget balance is sensitive to economic fluctuation. Indeed , when
the level of economic activities are low or moderate the amount of tax revenue collecte by the
government decreases while social expenditure increase, this leads to a deterioration of budget
balance. Conversely, a higher economic growth generates an improvement of budget balance
(automatic stabilizers). However, some authors (Talvi and Vegh, 2000) have suggeste that fiscal
policy can be pro-cyclical in developing countries with weak governments, because political
pressure to increase public spending go hand in hand with the growing tax revenue due to higher
economic growth. The strong increase in the fiscal demands during economic boom is called
“voracity effect” (lane and tornell, 1999).
EXD; (External Debt); External debt is quit important financial resource for many national
economies around the world. In this context, external debt will be take in recently in order to
reduce saving and external exchange gaps, close the budget deficits, and maintain the economic
growth and development. When external debt is take due to in adequate domestic resources is
used effectively, they will increase savings, investments and employment opportunities.
However, the ineffective and unproductive use of external debt results to several problems in the
economy. As result external borrowing will become a current issue again in order to repay these
debts.
IR; (Inflation rate); Keynesian believes that the great depression could have been averted if the
government had engaged in more government spending and income tax cuts (fiscal policy).
Inflation reduces real tax revenue and thus causes high fiscal deficit. This is called the
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inflationary approach to fiscal deficit. Sometimes the situation may be described as “olvera –
Tanzi effect” of fiscal deficit, i.e. Deficit caused by a decline in real tax revenues during period
of high inflation as a result levels reduce real tax revenues of the government significantly as the
government collects and accounts its tax receipts in latter and expenditures causing high budget
deficit in the country (Carlos Rodriguez: 1994).
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stationary after differencing it ‘p’ times. Economic variables stationary from the outset are I (0)
series and a variable that requires to be differenced once to be stationary is I (1) series (Gujarat,
1995).
The Phillips–Perron (PP) unit root tests are similar to ADF tests except that Phillips and Perron
use nonparametric statistical methods to take care of the serial correlation in the error terms
without adding lagged difference terms (Gujarati, 2004). The PP tests have the same asymptotic
distribution as the corresponding ADF z and t tests, but they are computed quite differently. The
Phillips-Perron (PP) unit-root tests differ from Augmented Dickey Fuller (ADF) tests mainly in
how they deal with serial correlation and heteroskedasticity in the residual and also the Phillips-
Perron (PP) tests ignore any serial correlation in the regression of test.
The Jarque-Bera normality test will be use to determine whether the regression errors are
normally distributed. Since normal distribution of variable and residual are very important
assumptions in regression. It is a joint asymptotic test whose statistic is calculated from the
skewness and kurtosis of the residuals.
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Model specification test
Test for omitte variable bias will important for our model since it is related to the assumption
that the error term and the independent variables in the model are not correlated (E (e|X) = 0). If
there is missing variable in our model and “is correlated with the included regression and the
omitted variable is a determinant of the dependent variable” (Stock and Watson, 2003,) Then our
regression coefficients are inconsistent. In Stata by using the ovtest command: omitted-variable
bias can be found. The null hypothesis is that the model does not have omitted-variables bias, if
the p-value is higher than the usual 95% significance.
Heteroskedasticity Test
The test for Heteroskedasticity investigates whether the variance of the errors in the model are
constant or not. Breusch-Pagan-Godfrey test is used to check whether the residuals are
Homoscedasticity. It tests the null hypothesis that the residuals are both Homoscedasticity and
that there is no problem of misspecification. The test regression is run by regressing each cross
product of the residuals on the cross products of the regressors and testing the joint significance
of the regression. If the test statistic is significant, that is, P value is less than 0.05; the null
hypothesis of Homoscedasticity and no misspecification will be rejected (Brooks, 2002: 445).
Tests for autocorrelation
In running ordinary least squares estimation the most important assumption is that the
consecutive error terms are not correlated or there is no autocorrelation. Running OLS estimation
by disregarding autocorrelation will result in inefficiency on the estimate result and its standard
errors are estimate in the wrong way. Therefore detecting autocorrelation is a vital issue for my
study .Since i use OLS estimation.
Detecting autocorrelation
The Durbin Watson (DW) test
H0- no autocorrelation
H1-autocorrelation exist
Autocorrelation prevails in time series data analysis in which correlation exist between residuals
exist (et depends on et-1). The problems of autocorrelation can be tested using DW (Durbin
Watson statistics).
Tests for multicollinearity
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It occurs when the explanatory variables are highly interrelated. Variance inflation factor (VIF)
can be employe to detect this problem. If VIF is greater than 10, then there is a problem of
multicollinearity. In the case serious multicollinearity, although BLUE, the OLS estimators have
large variance and covariance’s, making precise estimation difficult and because of this the
confidence interval tends to be much wider leading to acceptance of the zero null hypothesis
more readily (Guajarati, 20)
CHAPTER FOUR
1 Title selection ✔
2 Title approval ✔
3 Literature finding ✔
4 Proposal writing ✔
6 Final proposal ✔
submission
Presentation of ✔
proposal
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4.2 Budget Summaries
Table 2 Logistics and budget summaries
3 Pen In number 2 25 50
4 Pencil Number 1 10 10
Eraser Number 1 5 5
Total 885
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REFERENCE
Befekadu Degefe, Berhanu Nega, Getahun Tafesse, 200/01 second annual report on the
Ethiopia economy volume two.
Carlos Rodriguez, westerly, k. Schmidt Hebbel, 1994 fiscal performance with fixed
exchange rates, in carols Rodriguez, World Bank, Washington DC.
Clayton, 1995 economics principles and practices video disc edition.
Easterly W and Fishers (1990) the economics of the government budget deficit
constraint” the World Bank research observer, VOL-5.
Gujarati, N, Damodar (1995), basic econometrics, 4th edition, MC Graw Hill, network
Mankiw, G. (2007) macroeconomics, 7th edit. Worthy publisher.
National bank of Ethiopia (NBE), various annual bulletins.
Rodger Durnbusch, Stanley Fischer and Richard Startz, 2001 macroeconomics 8th edition.
25