The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries

This article examines the relationship between money supply and financial innovation in the Maghreb countries over the period of 1980–2018 for a large annual data set on five Maghreb countries using the panel autoregressive distributed lag model (PANEL-ARDL). The results obtained from the cointegrat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Djaballah Mustapha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-02-01
Series:Economics and Business
Subjects:
c20
e43
e53
g20
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2020-0012
id doaj-74a0a7f108ab4d1b9f92b84329bcf317
record_format Article
spelling doaj-74a0a7f108ab4d1b9f92b84329bcf3172021-09-05T21:00:43ZengSciendoEconomics and Business1407-73372256-03942020-02-0134116817810.2478/eb-2020-0012eb-2020-0012The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb CountriesDjaballah Mustapha0University of Mohamed Boudiaf, Msila, AlgeriaThis article examines the relationship between money supply and financial innovation in the Maghreb countries over the period of 1980–2018 for a large annual data set on five Maghreb countries using the panel autoregressive distributed lag model (PANEL-ARDL). The results obtained from the cointegration technique of Pesaran and Shin (1999) confirm that a long-term relationship exists between M2 and its determinants: GDP, inflation, and the credit interest rate. Above all, the results of the research show that mobile money positively and significantly influences the money supply both in the strict sense and in the broad sense. Also, the number of ATMs positively but not significantly influences the supply of money in the broad sense. Failure to take into account the expansion of the number of ATMs can therefore lead to a poor specification of the money supply, and monetary authorities need to explicitly integrate the effect of financial innovation for effective policy action to stabilize economies.https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2020-0012financial innovationmaghreb economicsmoney supply functionpanel-ardlc20e43e53g20
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Djaballah Mustapha
spellingShingle Djaballah Mustapha
The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries
Economics and Business
financial innovation
maghreb economics
money supply function
panel-ardl
c20
e43
e53
g20
author_facet Djaballah Mustapha
author_sort Djaballah Mustapha
title The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries
title_short The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries
title_full The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries
title_fullStr The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries
title_full_unstemmed The Relationship Between the Financial Innovation and the Money Supply: Empirical Study on the Maghreb Countries
title_sort relationship between the financial innovation and the money supply: empirical study on the maghreb countries
publisher Sciendo
series Economics and Business
issn 1407-7337
2256-0394
publishDate 2020-02-01
description This article examines the relationship between money supply and financial innovation in the Maghreb countries over the period of 1980–2018 for a large annual data set on five Maghreb countries using the panel autoregressive distributed lag model (PANEL-ARDL). The results obtained from the cointegration technique of Pesaran and Shin (1999) confirm that a long-term relationship exists between M2 and its determinants: GDP, inflation, and the credit interest rate. Above all, the results of the research show that mobile money positively and significantly influences the money supply both in the strict sense and in the broad sense. Also, the number of ATMs positively but not significantly influences the supply of money in the broad sense. Failure to take into account the expansion of the number of ATMs can therefore lead to a poor specification of the money supply, and monetary authorities need to explicitly integrate the effect of financial innovation for effective policy action to stabilize economies.
topic financial innovation
maghreb economics
money supply function
panel-ardl
c20
e43
e53
g20
url https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2020-0012
work_keys_str_mv AT djaballahmustapha therelationshipbetweenthefinancialinnovationandthemoneysupplyempiricalstudyonthemaghrebcountries
AT djaballahmustapha relationshipbetweenthefinancialinnovationandthemoneysupplyempiricalstudyonthemaghrebcountries
_version_ 1717782395297464320