The effects of Speculative oil trading on Inequality and the role of Governance: A comparative study of five African countries
Summary
This thesis examines how the financialization of oil, specifically speculative trading in oil
futures, affects inequality in five African countries heavily reliant on oil: Gabon, Nigeria,
Angola, The Republic of Congo and South Africa. The main research question asks whether
increased speculative trading contributes to inequality and to what extent governance quality
mitigates this effect. To explore this, panel data from 1999 to 2023 was analyzed using
POLS, GMM, first differences and fixed effects models, with the Human Development Index
as a proxy for inequality. The main finding of this research is that speculative trade alone
does not consistently increase inequality. Furthermore governance quality appears to amplify
the negative effects of financialization, which is inverted from the expected mitigation effect
seen in Resource curse and Dutch Disease theories. The results suggest that governance
reforms, while necessary, may be insufficient if countries exhibit underlying control of the
elite or underlying governance inadequacies remain unaddressed. For policymakers, this
highlights the importance of combining regulatory oversight in financial markets, with a
transparent and adequate governance structure in the economy of resource rich developing
countries.