Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana

Abstract The study seeks to establish the relationship between foreign direct investment to Ghana’s agriculture sector and economic growth with secondary data mainly sourced from the World Development Indicator. The techniques employed to analyse the data include descriptive statistic, unit root tes...

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Main Authors: Dadson Awunyo-Vitor, Ruby Adjoa Sackey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13731-018-0094-3
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spelling doaj-d989e75762964d709ef962ff2627bc6d2020-11-25T01:51:48ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship2192-53722018-11-017111510.1186/s13731-018-0094-3Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in GhanaDadson Awunyo-Vitor0Ruby Adjoa Sackey1Department of Agricultural Economics, Agribusiness and Extension, Faculty of Agriculture, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and TechnologyDepartment of Accounting Studies Education, College of Technology Education, University of EducationAbstract The study seeks to establish the relationship between foreign direct investment to Ghana’s agriculture sector and economic growth with secondary data mainly sourced from the World Development Indicator. The techniques employed to analyse the data include descriptive statistic, unit root test, Granger causality test and error correction model (ECM). The study accepted a neutrality hypothesis between foreign direct investment to the Ghanaian agricultural sector and its covariates; trade openness, capital and government expenditure. The study also revealed positive and significant relationship between economic growth and foreign direct invest flow to the agricultural sector and volume of trade respectively. However, government expenditure exhibit negative but significant relationship with economic growth. The study contributes to economic development literature from an important but neglected research context with regards to agricultural development via foreign direct investment to support job creation and overall economic development with particular reference to Ghana. Thus, the study recommends that policy should focus on flexible trade policies to attract more foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows to Ghana’s agricultural sector to accelerate growth across board.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13731-018-0094-3Foreign direct investmentEconomic growthAgricultureGhana
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dadson Awunyo-Vitor
Ruby Adjoa Sackey
spellingShingle Dadson Awunyo-Vitor
Ruby Adjoa Sackey
Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana
Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Foreign direct investment
Economic growth
Agriculture
Ghana
author_facet Dadson Awunyo-Vitor
Ruby Adjoa Sackey
author_sort Dadson Awunyo-Vitor
title Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana
title_short Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana
title_full Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana
title_fullStr Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in Ghana
title_sort agricultural sector foreign direct investment and economic growth in ghana
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship
issn 2192-5372
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract The study seeks to establish the relationship between foreign direct investment to Ghana’s agriculture sector and economic growth with secondary data mainly sourced from the World Development Indicator. The techniques employed to analyse the data include descriptive statistic, unit root test, Granger causality test and error correction model (ECM). The study accepted a neutrality hypothesis between foreign direct investment to the Ghanaian agricultural sector and its covariates; trade openness, capital and government expenditure. The study also revealed positive and significant relationship between economic growth and foreign direct invest flow to the agricultural sector and volume of trade respectively. However, government expenditure exhibit negative but significant relationship with economic growth. The study contributes to economic development literature from an important but neglected research context with regards to agricultural development via foreign direct investment to support job creation and overall economic development with particular reference to Ghana. Thus, the study recommends that policy should focus on flexible trade policies to attract more foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows to Ghana’s agricultural sector to accelerate growth across board.
topic Foreign direct investment
Economic growth
Agriculture
Ghana
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13731-018-0094-3
work_keys_str_mv AT dadsonawunyovitor agriculturalsectorforeigndirectinvestmentandeconomicgrowthinghana
AT rubyadjoasackey agriculturalsectorforeigndirectinvestmentandeconomicgrowthinghana
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