| dc.description.abstract | 
The study assessed the effect of public spending efficiency on human capital, 
public debt, and income inequality in Africa. Specifically, the study computed 
technical efficiency scores for public spending on education and health and 
examined its effect on public debt and income inequality. Data Envelopment 
Analysis and DEA Bootstrapping models were used to investigate the relative 
technical efficiencies and their correlates in Africa. System GMM was used to 
examine the relationship between public spending, public debt, and income 
inequality while Lind and Mehlum U-shaped test approach was used to 
determine the turning points. The data was sourced from the World Bank’s 
World Development Indicators, World Governance Indicators, and 
Standardized World Income Inequality database from 2006 to 2017 for African 
countries. The study found public spending on health and education to be 
inefficient. The countries (DMUs) were found to be more efficient in health 
spending than in education spending. Factors such as government expenditure,
economic growth, urbanization, trade openness, and institutional quality were 
found to influence efficiency of public spending on human capital. Institutional 
quality of at least 50% increases efficiency of public spending on education. 
Efficiency of public spending on health of at least 70.62% was found to reduce
public debt while efficiency of public spending on education of at least 77.1% 
and 77.4% were found to reduce public debt and income inequality respectively. 
The study recommends that governments should ensure high levels of efficiency 
of public spending on human capital to reduce public debt and income 
inequality by ensuring institutional quality, trade openness, and growth in 
urbanization. | 
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