An empirical investigation into the impact of public debt on economic growth: The case of Zimbabwe (1980-2014)
Abstract
Zimbabwe’s public debt has been mounting yet the real growth rate has been on average
declining. Could this possibly mean that the escalating public debt is hampering the real growth
rate of Zimbabwe? This study investigates the impact of public debt on economic growth in
Zimbabwe for the period 1980-2014. The public debt stock is disaggregated into external debt
and domestic debt in order to determine the impact of each on economic growth independently.
The data was subjected to diagnostic tests before estimation. A long-run relationship was
established amongst the variables real economic growth, domestic debt, external debt, budget
deficit, external debt service and investment. Thus, a short-run Error Correction Model (ECM)
had to be used to capture the dynamics in short-run disequilibrium towards the long-run
equilibrium. The empirical results showed that external debt negatively affects the real growth
rate of Zimbabwe, both in the short and long-run. This confirms the existence of ‘debt
overhang’ in Zimbabwe. In the long-run, domestic debt positively affects economic growth.
However, in the short-run, the effect is negative but insignificant. Several policy implications
emerged from the empirical results. Zimbabwe should strengthen its debt management in order
to keep the public debt within sustainable thresholds. Furthermore, the country can make use
of debt to equity swaps by privatising underperforming parastatals. This would make them
competitive and efficient. This move could attract more foreign direct investment inflows and
create more employment thus lead to an increase in real growth rate of Zimbabwe.