ABSTRACT
This study provided an empirical analysis of causality
between financial development and economic growth in Nigeria. Time series data from 1981 to 2019 relevant to the
study were collected from the Central Bank of Nigeria statistical bulletin,
Volume 30. The ordinary least squares (OLS) method of multivariate regression was
utilized in analyzing the semi-log model. The Augmented Dickey-Fuller unit root
test was employed to establish the stationarity of the variables while the
Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) model was used for testing for the
existence of long-run and short-run equilibrium conditions while the Granger
causality test was applied to ascertain the direction of influence between
financial development indicators and economic growth in Nigeria. Financial
development indicators used in the study were financial depth (measured by
broad money supply to GDP ratio), private sector credit to GDP ratio, stock
market development (measured by market capitalization to GDP ratio), banking
sector development (measured by total banks assets to GDP ratio), savings rate
(proxied by national savings to GDP ratio) and informal finance which was
proxied by the ratio of currency outside the banks (measured by M1 to M2
ratio). On the other hand, economic growth was measured by real gross domestic
product. In consonance with the demand following hypothesis, the results of the
Granger causality test revealed a causal relationship from real gross domestic
product to financial depth, private sector credit ratio, market capitalization
ratio and banking sector ratio. The ARDL bounds test indicated that a long-run
cointegrating relationship existed between financial development indicators and
economic growth in Nigeria. From the ARDL estimates, it was found that
financial depth had a negative and significant influence on economic growth in
the short run with positive but insignificant influence in the long run. Also,
the private sector credit ratio had a negative influence on economic growth in
both the long-run and short-run, but it was only significant in the short-run.
In the long-run and short-run, the market capitalization ratio had a positive
and significant influence on economic growth. Again, savings rate and informal
finance (measured by the rate of currency outside the banks) were found to
exert a negative and significant influence on economic growth in both the
long-run and short-run. It is therefore recommended that government carry out subsequent
efforts towards developing the financial sector in conformation with global standards.
As such, factors that could hinder the growth of
the flow of financial resources to economically productive sectors should be
mitigated and controlled.
CHARITY, E (2023). Causality Between Financial Development And Economic Growth In Nigeria. Mouau.afribary.org: Retrieved Nov 17, 2024, from https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/causality-between-financial-development-and-economic-growth-in-nigeria-7-2
ENYINNAYA, CHARITY. "Causality Between Financial Development And Economic Growth In Nigeria" Mouau.afribary.org. Mouau.afribary.org, 08 May. 2023, https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/causality-between-financial-development-and-economic-growth-in-nigeria-7-2. Accessed 17 Nov. 2024.
ENYINNAYA, CHARITY. "Causality Between Financial Development And Economic Growth In Nigeria". Mouau.afribary.org, Mouau.afribary.org, 08 May. 2023. Web. 17 Nov. 2024. < https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/causality-between-financial-development-and-economic-growth-in-nigeria-7-2 >.
ENYINNAYA, CHARITY. "Causality Between Financial Development And Economic Growth In Nigeria" Mouau.afribary.org (2023). Accessed 17 Nov. 2024. https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/causality-between-financial-development-and-economic-growth-in-nigeria-7-2