Effect of foreign direct investment volatility on economic growth in Uganda (1986-2016)
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the effect of foreign direct investment (FDI) volatility
on economic growth in Uganda for the period 1986-2016. Quarterly data with 124 data points was
used for analysis. Specifically, the study established the short and long run effect of FDI volatility
on economic growth and also investigated the long run effect of labor force participation rate and
trade openness on economic growth. The log-linear model was used to ascertain the effect of FDI
volatility on economic growth using the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) approach. The
variables used for analysis included; Real GDP growth rate, Foreign Direct Investment Volatility,
Trade Openness and Labor Force Participation Rate which were obtained from World Bank open
access database and labor force participation rate which was obtained from International Labor
Organization website.
The results revealed that in the long run for the period before the structural break (1986Q4-
1990Q4), foreign direct investment volatility, labor force participation rate, trade openness had a
significant negative relationship with economic growth (p=0.001, p=0.004 and p=0.000
respectively). For the period after the structural break, foreign direct investment volatility had a
significant negative effect on economic growth (p=0.000) while labor force participation rate, and
trade openness had a positive relationship with economic growth though insignificant (p=0.121
and p=0.712 respectively). In the short run, foreign direct investment volatility had a negative
significant relationship with economic growth for both periods, that is, p=0.001 and p=0.000
respectively. Moreover, it was established that while economic growth may drift in the short run,
the disequilibrium adjusted at about 55.0 and 19.6 percentages quarterly for the period before and
after the structural break towards long run equilibrium to bring stability in economic growth.
The study recommends factors that volatility need to be addressed to make FDI inflows more
stable which will be a major boost to economic growth through availing adequate resources to
finance long term investment.