Journal Article


The mobile phone as an argument for good governance in Sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract

Purpose. This study presents theoretical and empirical arguments for the role of mobile telephony in promoting good governance in 47 sub-Saharan African countries for the period 2000-2012. Design/methodology/approach. The empirical inquiry uses an endogeneity-robust GMM approach with forward orthogonal deviations to analyse the linkage between mobile phone usage and the variation in three broad governance categories — political, economic and institutional. Findings. Three key findings are established: First, in terms of individual governance indicators, mobile phones consistently stimulated good governance by the same magnitude, with the exception of the effect on the regulation component of economic governance. Second, when indicators are combined, the effect of mobile phones on general governance is three times higher than that on the institutional governance category. Third, countries with lower levels of governance indicators are catching-up with their counterparts with more advanced dynamics. Originality/value. The study makes both theoretical and empirical contributions by highlighting the importance of various combinations of governance indicators and their responsiveness to mobile phone usage.

Attached files

Authors

Asongu, Simplice A.
le Roux, Sara
Nwachukwu, Jacinta
Pyke , Chris

Oxford Brookes departments

Oxford Brookes Business School\Oxford Brookes Business School\Department of Accounting, Finance and Economics

Dates

Year of publication: 2018
Date of RADAR deposit: 2018-09-05


Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License


Related resources

This RADAR resource is the Accepted Manuscript of The mobile phone as an argument for good governance in Sub-Saharan Africa

Details

  • Owner: Joseph Ripp
  • Collection: Outputs
  • Version: 1 (show all)
  • Status: Live
  • Views (since Sept 2022): 309