Abstract:
Economists have been trying to study the linkages between aid
inflow and government activities in developing countries. With the passage
of time, the analysis has become more sophisticated. The development of
two-gap models [for example, Chenery and Bruno(1962); and Chenery and
Adelman(1966), among others] was an important contribution to the
literature. More recently, two-gap models have been extended into threegap
models. Iqbal (1995) added a fiscal constraint to the traditional saving
and foreign exchange gap. In such cases, the fiscal constraint is intended to
reflect potential limitations to finance public investment that may be
required to support a given level of output.
Another development is the analysis of effectiveness of foreign aid
on the fiscal behaviour of governments in underdeveloped countries.
Empirical studies by Khilji and Zampelli(1991), Khan and Hoshino(1992),
among others are important contributions to this topic. All these studies
gave conflicting conclusions about the effectiveness of assistance in terms of
fiscal behaviour. Generally, these studies prove that aid reduces the taxation
effort and is substituted between public investment and public
consumption.
The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of foreign aid on
the behaviour of recipient countries like Pakistan. The response is measured in
terms of their public investment and consumption as well as taxation. Both
official and unofficial grants and loans from bilateral and multilateral sources
are included in aid. It is postulated that the government’s expenditure and
revenue efforts are affected by foreign aid through a reallocation within the
categories of public expenditures and revenue raising. Various previous research
studies have found evidence for considerable dissipations of aid in the form of
government consumption (Please.1967:Papanek, 1973; Wejsskopf, 1972a,
1972b; and Heller, 1974). Many researchers concentrate at the macro level on
the relationship between foreign aid, domestic savings and economic growth
(see, for example, Griffin and Enos, 1970).Recent work by Mosley, Hudson and Horrel (1987) showed that while the conclusions regarding such putative
relationships may be valid, there is nevertheless an interesting question
regarding the effect of foreign assistance on intermediate policy variables such
as public investment, government consumption and taxation. We pursue their
lead and try to trace such a relation in a simultaneous equation model applied
to an underdeveloped country, Pakistan. The results confirm the hypothesis
that aid does affect consumption, investment and taxation in Pakistan. In
particular, it is shown that grants and loans have different effects on investment
and taxation. In the next section, we describe the model and derive the system
of equations. The data, estimation procedure, and results are described in
sections 3 and 4 respectively. Summary and conclusions follow.