The effect of government expenditure on unemployment in Somalia (1990-2023)
The effect of government expenditure on unemployment in Somalia (1990-2023)
Date
2025-03
Authors
Mohamed, Abdirahman Abdihamid
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Makerere University
Abstract
This study examined the effect of government expenditure on unemployment in Somalia during
1990-2023. Secondary annual data was obtained from the World Bank and the Statistical,
Economic and Social Research and Training Centre for Islamic Countries (SESRIC). The
Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) method was used to establish the short- and long-run
relationship between government expenditure and unemployment, while the Granger causality test
was used to determine the direction of causality among the variables. Unemployment was the
dependent variable in this research, whereas government expenditure, GDP, agricultural value
added, and foreign aid (ODA) were the independent variables.
Augmented Dickey-Fuller test was used in testing stationarity of data, and this indicated that
variables were integrated with mixed orders and therefore the use of the ARDL model is justified.
Findings from the long run indicate that a rise by 1% in government spending reduces
unemployment by 0.03%. Similarly, the rise by 1% in GDP reduces unemployment by 0.049%,
confirming that economic growth enhances employment. Agriculture value-added was also found
to have a strong negative effect, whereby a 1% rise in agricultural output lowers unemployment
by 1.70%. By comparison, a rise of 1% in foreign aid (ODA) adds 0.0037% to unemployment,
suggesting inefficiency in aid utilization or dependency effects. In the short run, a 1% rise in GDP
reduces unemployment by 0.32% at lag zero and by 0.15% at lag one. Production in agriculture
adds to unemployment by 0.41% in the initial period but reduces it by 1.50% at lag one in the short
run. The Granger causality test confirms a one-way causality from public expenditure to
unemployment, indicating that fiscal policy in Somalia influences labor market dynamics but may
not be directly addressing unemployment reduction.
The recommendations emphasize the importance of improving the efficiency of government
expenditure to ensure that fiscal policy effectively contributes to job creation. Maintaining
widespread GDP growth is essential for facilitating labor absorption and decreasing
unemployment rates. Prioritizing the enhancement of agriculture, the largest employer, is essential,
especially through strategies that increase productivity and utilize labor effectively. ODA
management requires reform to ensure that aid aligns more closely with national priorities and
effectively contributes to reducing unemployment.
Subject Keywords: Government expenditure; Unemployment; Somalia
Description
A dissertation submitted to the Directorate of Research and Graduate Training in Partial Fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the Degree of Master of Science in Quantitative Economics of Makerere University
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Citation
Mohamed, A. A. (2025). The effect of government expenditure on unemployment in Somalia (1990-2023). Unpublished Masters dissertation. Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.