Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria

In an attempt to examine the influence of inflation on the growth prospects of the Nigerian economy, the study employs the autoregressive distributed lag on the selected variables, i.e. real gross domestic product (GDP), inflation rate, interest rate, exchange rate, degree of economy`s openness, mon...

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Main Authors: Anthony Olugbenga Adaramola, Oluwabunmi Dada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2020-04-01
Series:Investment Management & Financial Innovations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/13355/IMFI_2020_02_Adaramola.pdf
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spelling doaj-4ae7fd6703624eb5af7313b94e3739e52020-11-25T03:08:38ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Investment Management & Financial Innovations 1810-49671812-93582020-04-0117211310.21511/imfi.17(2).2020.0113355Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from NigeriaAnthony Olugbenga Adaramola0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9572-4092Oluwabunmi Dada1Associate Professor, Department of Finance, Faculty of Management Science, Ekiti State UniversityPh.D Student, Department of Finance, Faculty of Management Science, Ekiti State UniversityIn an attempt to examine the influence of inflation on the growth prospects of the Nigerian economy, the study employs the autoregressive distributed lag on the selected variables, i.e. real gross domestic product (GDP), inflation rate, interest rate, exchange rate, degree of economy`s openness, money supply, and government consumption expenditures for the period 1980–2018. The study findings indicate that inflation and real exchange rate exert a significant negative impact on economic growth, while interest rate and money supply indicate a positive and significant impact on economic growth. Other variables in the model depict no influence on the economic growth of Nigeria. The causality result shows the unidirectional relationships between interest rate, exchange rate, government consumption expenditures and gross domestic product. However, inflation and the degree of openness show no causal relationship with gross domestic product. As a result, the study recommends that a more pragmatic effort is needed by the monetary authorities to target the inflation vigorously to prevent its adverse effect by ensuring a tolerable rate that would stimulate the economic growth of Nigeria.https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/13355/IMFI_2020_02_Adaramola.pdfautoregressive distributed lag (ARDL)economic growthinflation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony Olugbenga Adaramola
Oluwabunmi Dada
spellingShingle Anthony Olugbenga Adaramola
Oluwabunmi Dada
Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria
Investment Management & Financial Innovations
autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL)
economic growth
inflation
author_facet Anthony Olugbenga Adaramola
Oluwabunmi Dada
author_sort Anthony Olugbenga Adaramola
title Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria
title_short Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria
title_full Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria
title_fullStr Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from Nigeria
title_sort impact of inflation on economic growth: evidence from nigeria
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Investment Management & Financial Innovations
issn 1810-4967
1812-9358
publishDate 2020-04-01
description In an attempt to examine the influence of inflation on the growth prospects of the Nigerian economy, the study employs the autoregressive distributed lag on the selected variables, i.e. real gross domestic product (GDP), inflation rate, interest rate, exchange rate, degree of economy`s openness, money supply, and government consumption expenditures for the period 1980–2018. The study findings indicate that inflation and real exchange rate exert a significant negative impact on economic growth, while interest rate and money supply indicate a positive and significant impact on economic growth. Other variables in the model depict no influence on the economic growth of Nigeria. The causality result shows the unidirectional relationships between interest rate, exchange rate, government consumption expenditures and gross domestic product. However, inflation and the degree of openness show no causal relationship with gross domestic product. As a result, the study recommends that a more pragmatic effort is needed by the monetary authorities to target the inflation vigorously to prevent its adverse effect by ensuring a tolerable rate that would stimulate the economic growth of Nigeria.
topic autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL)
economic growth
inflation
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/13355/IMFI_2020_02_Adaramola.pdf
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