Purpose- The main objective of this paper is twofold. First, the paper aims to examine the effect of financial development on the economic growth
of African countries. Second, the paper also aims to examine if institutional quality moderates the nexus between financial development and
growth.
Methodology- A panel dataset of 35 African countries over the period from 1985 through 2018 is used and to handle the problem of endogeneity
and reverse causality the dynamic panel estimation method, GMM estimation, was employed to estimate the relationship while accounting for
other control variables that affect economic growth. The data set was retrieved from World Bank world development indicators, international
monetary fund, and International Country Risk Guide (ICRG).
Findings- The empirical results of the study indicate that financial development has an ambiguous impact on the economic growth of African
countries, but it has a significant positive effect on growth if interacted with the institutional quality index such as government stability, rule of
law, and corruption. The interaction term between finance and institutional quality indicator is positive and significant, implying that the positive
effect of financial development depends on the level of institutional quality of the country.
Conclusion- To sum up, in countries where institutional quality is high, the effect of financial development on growth is higher compared to
countries where institutional quality is low. This indicates that improving institutional quality is essential to reap the benefit of financial
development in Africa. It is thus vital for African countries to engage in drafting various programs and strategies to improve institutional quality
so as to improve growth.
Financial development economic growth Africa institutional quality
Birincil Dil | İngilizce |
---|---|
Konular | Ekonomi, Finans, İşletme |
Bölüm | Articles |
Yazarlar | |
Yayımlanma Tarihi | 31 Aralık 2021 |
Yayımlandığı Sayı | Yıl 2021 |
Journal of Business, Economics and Finance (JBEF) is a scientific, academic, double blind peer-reviewed, quarterly and open-access journal. The publication language is English. The journal publishes four issues a year. The issuing months are March, June, September and December. The journal aims to provide a research source for all practitioners, policy makers and researchers working in the areas of business, economics and finance. The Editor of JBEF invites all manuscripts that that cover theoretical and/or applied researches on topics related to the interest areas of the Journal. JBEF charges no submission or publication fee.
Ethics
Policy - JBEF applies the standards of
Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). JBEF is committed to the academic
community ensuring ethics and quality of manuscripts in publications.
Plagiarism is strictly forbidden and the manuscripts found to be plagiarized
will not be accepted or if published will be removed from the publication. Authors
must certify that their manuscripts are their original work. Plagiarism,
duplicate, data fabrication and redundant publications are forbidden. The
manuscripts are subject to plagiarism check by iThenticate or similar. All manuscript submissions must provide a similarity report (up to 15% excluding quotes, bibliography, abstract, method).
Open Access - All research articles published in PressAcademia Journals are fully open access; immediately freely available to read, download and share. Articles are published under the terms of a Creative Commons license which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Open access is a property of individual works, not necessarily journals or publishers. Community standards, rather than copyright law, will continue to provide the mechanism for enforcement of proper attribution and responsible use of the published work, as they do now.