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Tables

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2023

François Bourguignon
Affiliation:
École d'économie de Paris and École des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Romain Houssa
Affiliation:
Université de Namur, Belgium
Jean-Philippe Platteau
Affiliation:
Université de Namur, Belgium
Paul Reding
Affiliation:
Université de Namur, Belgium

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
State Capture and Rent-Seeking in Benin
The Institutional Diagnostic Project
, pp. xiii - xiv
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Tables

  1. 1.1Cross-country comparison of interpersonal trust: 2011–2013 Round (per cent)

  2. 1.2Cross-country comparison of trust in institutions: 2011–2013 Round (per cent)

  3. 1.3Cross-country comparison of trust in institutions: Distribution of the population by ethnic group and growth rates, 2002–2013

  4. 2.1Sector-based structure of GDP (per cent of value-added at current factor prices) and informality ratios

  5. 2.2Structural changes in the Beninese economy and decomposition of changes in labour productivity, 2006–2015

  6. 2.3aBenin’s domestic and external accounts, 2002–2019 (per cent of GDP): Government revenue, expenditures, financial balance, and debt

  7. 2.3bBenin’s domestic and external accounts, 2002–2019 (per cent of GDP): Financing flows of the economy and external debt

  8. 2.A.1Growth accounting

  9. 3.1Overview of the sample

  10. 3.2Broad institutional areas by perceived weaknesses

  11. 3.3aSelected examples of detailed institutional performance: weaknesses

  12. 3.3bSelected examples of detailed institutional performance: strengths

  13. 3.4Top issues with significant differences between men and women

  14. 3.A.1Institutional choices across selected groups

  15. 4.1Balance table, list experiment on politicians’ affiliation with firms

  16. 4.2List experiment: Politicians’ affiliation with local and national business interests

  17. 4.3Clientelist contracts – descriptive statistics

  18. 4.4Electoral competition (uncertainty) and firms’ strategies (capture) in local elections in Benin

  19. 4.5Effect of electoral competition (winning margin) on firms’ preference for direct capture, beta coefficients

  20. 4.6Effect of electoral reform (uncertainty decrease) on firms’ strategic decision-making, beta coefficients

  21. 4.7Effect of electoral reform (uncertainty decrease) on use of non-programmatic politics and transfers to business interests, beta coefficients

  22. 5.1Overview of mode of organisationof cotton across political regimes in Benin, 1960–present

  23. 6.1Pairwise correlation between interest variables

  24. 6.2Descriptive statistics

  25. 6.3Three-stage estimates of the tax effort in sub-Saharan African countries

  26. 6.4Full sample tax effort–based ranking

  27. 6.5Tax effort by type of tax

  28. 6.6Logistic regression results

  29. 6.7Correlation between civil service wage bill and tax effort

  30. 6.A.1Data sources and definitions

  31. 7.1Institutional bottlenecks

  32. 8.1Nigeria’s import barriers on selected products, import tax rates (per cent) and import bans, 1995–2018

  33. 8.2Value of Benin’s imports by customs regime (per cent of GDP), 2002–2017

  34. 8.3Entrepôt trade tax rates and revenues in Togo and Benin, 2008–2017

  35. 9.1A synthetic ordering of the institutional factors impeding Benin’s long-term development

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