Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method

Abstract This study investigated the impact of financial sector development on domestic investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for the years 1985–2017. The study employed the augmented mean group procedure, which accounts for country-specific heter...

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Main Authors: Chimere O. Iheonu, Simplice A. Asongu, Kingsley O. Odo, Patrick K. Ojiem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-08-01
Series:Financial Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40854-020-00195-0
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spelling doaj-3dbbc689c0bf4d0fa72aa22f53df1f392020-11-25T03:05:55ZengSpringerOpenFinancial Innovation2199-47302020-08-016111510.1186/s40854-020-00195-0Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data methodChimere O. Iheonu0Simplice A. Asongu1Kingsley O. Odo2Patrick K. Ojiem3Department of Economics, University of NigeriaDepartment of Economics, University of South AfricaDepartment of Economics, University of NigeriaDepartment of Economics, University of NigeriaAbstract This study investigated the impact of financial sector development on domestic investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for the years 1985–2017. The study employed the augmented mean group procedure, which accounts for country-specific heterogeneity and cross-sectional dependence, and the Granger non-causality test to test for causality in the presence of cross-sectional dependence. The results show that (1) The impact of financial sector development on domestic investment depends on the measure of financial sector development utilised; (2) Domestic credit to the private sector has a positive but insignificant impact on domestic investment in ECOWAS, whereas banking intermediation efficiency (i.e., ability of the banks to transform deposits into credit) and broad money supply negatively and significant influence domestic investment; (3) Cross-country differences exist in the impact of financial sector development on domestic investment in the selected ECOWAS countries; and (4) Domestic credit to the private sector Granger causes domestic investment in ECOWAS. The study recommends careful consideration in the measure of financial development that is utilised as a policy instrument to foster domestic investment. We also highlight the importance of employing country-specific domestic investment policies to avoid blanket policy measures. Domestic credit to the private sector should be given priority when forecasting domestic investment into the future.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40854-020-00195-0Financial sector developmentDomestic investmentAugmented mean groupGranger non-causality testECOWAS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chimere O. Iheonu
Simplice A. Asongu
Kingsley O. Odo
Patrick K. Ojiem
spellingShingle Chimere O. Iheonu
Simplice A. Asongu
Kingsley O. Odo
Patrick K. Ojiem
Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
Financial Innovation
Financial sector development
Domestic investment
Augmented mean group
Granger non-causality test
ECOWAS
author_facet Chimere O. Iheonu
Simplice A. Asongu
Kingsley O. Odo
Patrick K. Ojiem
author_sort Chimere O. Iheonu
title Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
title_short Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
title_full Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
title_fullStr Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
title_full_unstemmed Financial sector development and Investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
title_sort financial sector development and investment in selected countries of the economic community of west african states: empirical evidence using heterogeneous panel data method
publisher SpringerOpen
series Financial Innovation
issn 2199-4730
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Abstract This study investigated the impact of financial sector development on domestic investment in selected countries of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for the years 1985–2017. The study employed the augmented mean group procedure, which accounts for country-specific heterogeneity and cross-sectional dependence, and the Granger non-causality test to test for causality in the presence of cross-sectional dependence. The results show that (1) The impact of financial sector development on domestic investment depends on the measure of financial sector development utilised; (2) Domestic credit to the private sector has a positive but insignificant impact on domestic investment in ECOWAS, whereas banking intermediation efficiency (i.e., ability of the banks to transform deposits into credit) and broad money supply negatively and significant influence domestic investment; (3) Cross-country differences exist in the impact of financial sector development on domestic investment in the selected ECOWAS countries; and (4) Domestic credit to the private sector Granger causes domestic investment in ECOWAS. The study recommends careful consideration in the measure of financial development that is utilised as a policy instrument to foster domestic investment. We also highlight the importance of employing country-specific domestic investment policies to avoid blanket policy measures. Domestic credit to the private sector should be given priority when forecasting domestic investment into the future.
topic Financial sector development
Domestic investment
Augmented mean group
Granger non-causality test
ECOWAS
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40854-020-00195-0
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AT kingsleyoodo financialsectordevelopmentandinvestmentinselectedcountriesoftheeconomiccommunityofwestafricanstatesempiricalevidenceusingheterogeneouspaneldatamethod
AT patrickkojiem financialsectordevelopmentandinvestmentinselectedcountriesoftheeconomiccommunityofwestafricanstatesempiricalevidenceusingheterogeneouspaneldatamethod
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