@article{Leykun_2022, title={Influence of current and capital account liberalization on economic growth: Evidence from heavily indebted SSA economies }, volume={1}, url={https://journals.hu.edu.et/hu-journals/index.php/ajebr/article/view/415}, abstractNote={<p>Capital and current account restrictions were widely used in the past but were largely released during the liberalization movement of the 1990s, as interventionist policies got widespread support that paves the way to the renewed conception of government as an impartial referee. Such a restriction has come back on the agenda with the surge in public debt in the rouse of the Global Financial Crisis. By distorting market signals and incentives, financial repression persuades losses from inefficiency and rent-seeking that cannot be easily quantified. This paper seeks to investigate the impact of current and capital account liberalization on growth, using recent de jure and de facto measures, covering 26 heavily indebted Sub-Saharan African countries over 2000-2020. The results suggest that capital account liberalization escalates growth, brought distributional efficiency in&nbsp;conformity&nbsp;with the neoclassical growth model.</p>}, number={1}, journal={African Journal of Economic and Business Research}, author={Leykun, Fentaw}, year={2022}, month={Jun.}, pages={15-34} }