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BY Abdulsalam Abubakar (PhD) DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

COLLOQUIUM PRESENTATION. FINANCIAL – REAL SECTORS NEXUS: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM THE ECONOMIC COMMUNITY OF WEST AFRICAN STATES. BY Abdulsalam Abubakar (PhD) DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION. INTRODUCTION 2. OVERVIEW OF THE ECOWAS ECONOMY 3. LITERATURE REVIEW

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BY Abdulsalam Abubakar (PhD) DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

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  1. COLLOQUIUM PRESENTATION FINANCIAL – REAL SECTORS NEXUS: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM THE ECONOMIC COMMUNITY OF WEST AFRICAN STATES BY Abdulsalam Abubakar (PhD) DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

  2. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION • INTRODUCTION 2. OVERVIEW OF THE ECOWAS ECONOMY 3. LITERATURE REVIEW 4. METHODOLOGY 5. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS 6. CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS

  3. BACKGROUND • Financial development: critical for long-term economic growth - Through its effect on capital accumulation and productivity - However, currently, only physical capital is considered • Financial systemin ECOWAS is largely under-developed, in 2010: - Broad money/GDP 37% (African average 38%) - Private credit/GDP 21% (African average 24%) • Weak economic performance - Average GDP per capita was only US$ 669.5 (African average US$ 1669)

  4. BACKGROUND CONT. • From the perspective of endogenous growth models - Weak economic performance of ECOWAS is due to low human and physical capital accumulation, and productivity - Human capital, average HDI below 0.449 (African average 0.475) - Physical capital also low, gross fixed capital formation 22% of GDP - Low human and physical capitals apparently lead to low productivity • Poor performance of both financial system and real economy, has raised important issues pertaining to the regions’ quest for growth - Is financial system having any influence on the real economy? - Through which channels? - Which of financial development and output precede the other? • These issues motivate this study - To explore the financial-real sectors dynamic relationship in the ECOWAS region

  5. PROBLEM STATEMENT • Low financial access in ECOWAS region - Only 3.86% and 13.32% of adult population borrow from and have accounts with formal financial institutions - Only 19.51% of firms maintain a line of credit and 56.73% of them identified access to finance as their major constraint • Immediate cause: under-development of the ECOWAS financial system • Its consequences - Low levels of capital accumulation and productivity - Poor economic performance, as indicated by low GDP per capita • The above issues indicate - Structural problems of financial development and its influence on output in the ECOWAS region - These are major policy concerns, which this study seek to highlight

  6. RESEARCH OBJECTIVES & QUESTIONS • The broad objective of the study is to investigate the effect of financial development on the real economy of ECOWAS • Specific objectives

  7. HYPOTHESES OF THE STUDY The previous research objectives and questions are formulated into the following testable hypotheses • H01:Financial development does not have any significant impact on output growth in the ECOWAS region • H02:The accumulation of physical and human capitals and productivity, do not mediate the impact of financial development on output in the ECOWAS region • H03:There is no causal relationship between financial development and output growth in ECOWAS

  8. SCOPE OF THE STUDY • Financial Sector comprises of many institutions, markets & regulatory agencies etc. • But the study concern financial development • Specifically, monetary and banking sector development • There are only three stock and Bond markets available • Also the study is at macro level • And covers 11 ECOWAS member states; Liberia, Cabo Verde, Guinea and Guinea Bissau were excluded • Study period is 1980-2011; based on data availability

  9. MAP OF AFRICA SHOWING ECOWAS’s LOCATION

  10. GEOGRAPHY AND DEMOGRAPHY OF ECOWAS • Geography - ECOWAS formed in 1975, member states are - Francophone: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo - Anglophone: Cabo Verde, Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone - Total surface area 5, 112, 903 km2, - 17% of the total African land mass • Demography - Total estimated population of 305 million in 2010 - Annual growth rate of 2.67% - The most populated region of Africa

  11. OVERVIEW OF THE ECOWAS REAL ECONOMY • Structure of the economies - Dominated by agriculture and minerals mining - Commodities; cocoa, cotton, crude oil, diamond, iron oreetc. - Low domestic processing due to low industrial capacity - Services & agriculture majorcontributors to GDP (79.7% in 2010) - Huge and dynamic informal sector • Key Macroeconomic variables - Moderate economic growth and inflation (5.6% & 5.5% in 2010) - Low savings and investment (14.7% & 21.9% of GDP in 2010) • Public sector - As the major economic actor - But faced with low revenue and high expenditure - Hence negative fiscal balance and high debt profile • External sector - High import relative to export, - Hence, negative trade and current account balances - FDI and other capital flows on the rise, but devoid of local content

  12. MONETARY & FINANCIAL SECTORS OF ECOWAS • Monetary institutions and monetary policy - Single central bank in WAEMU zone (BCEAO) - Issues currency and conducts monetary policy - Constrained by CFA arrangements - To deposit 65% foreign reserve in operating account at French treasury - Uses segregated reserve requirement and reverse repo operations - Monetary policy in non-WAEMU takes different approaches - Each country has its own central bank - Adopt various tools and strategies to implement monetary policy - Ranging from reserve requirement to inflation targeting

  13. Financial Sector - Generally bank-based; foreign banks dominance in WAEMU - Banks and related institutions constitutes almost 90% of total financial sector assets - Low levels of deposits and credits to private sector; less than 25% of GDP - Banks have high taste for government securities - Private sector faces financing challenges, despite excess liquidity in banks - Banks charge high collateral for private loan, sometimes up to 100% of principal amount and high interest rate - But government sometimes interfere with credit allocation - Capital market plays limited role - The only three stock exchange markets have low capitalisation and turnover - Bond market blossoming; trading largely in short-term government securities - Minimal corporate bond - Small but growing MFIs, increasing financial access

  14. THEORETICAL LITERATURE (FINANCE-OUTPUT)

  15. EMPIRICAL LITERATURE (FINANCE-OUTPUT)

  16. EMPIRICAL LITERATURE (FINANCE-OUTPUT)

  17. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK • Augmented endogenous growth model by Lucas (1988) • In which the accumulation of physical and human capitals account for long-run growth • The financial sector facilitates capital accumulations by mobilising and allocating funds and easing borrowing constraints • Furthermore, the model also assumed technological progress to be endogenous • This assumption opens the scope for financial development to stimulate long-run growth • By improving the productivity of investment • The financial sector enables this through: • Processing and evaluating information on prospective investments, • Thereby allocating funds to projects with the highest marginal product of capital

  18. MODEL SPECIFICATION • Growth accounting on the basis of the endogenous model - Is concerned with how variation in output is due to physical and human capital accumulation and efficiency of investment - This is a basis to evaluate how the financial sector influences the real economic growth • Aggregate production function - Following Mankiw, Romer, and Weil (1992) and de Gregorio (1996) - In intensive form that is in per worker terms yields - Taking the log and differentiating over time, gives the growth rates

  19. MODEL SPECIFICATION CONT. • In eqn. 3, output growth is divided into three components - Total-factor-productivity, growth in physical and human capital accumulations • Adapting physical and human capital growth from Pagano (1993) and de Gregorio (1996) - And representing output growth & productivity by ygt & agt, yields • From eqn. 4, financial development can influence output growth - By raising the proportion of savings channelled to investment - The marginal productivity of capital and increasing human capital - By easing borrowing constraints

  20. VARIABLES AND DATA

  21. VARIABLES AND DATA CONT.

  22. ESTIMATION TECHNIQUES

  23. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS OBJECTIVE 1: To determine the impact of finance on output • Broad money as a measure of overall financial depth - having negative impact on output - Due to inflationary pressure • Financial sector deposit also having negative effect on output - Allocation of funds, largely to public sector - And few well-connected firms and individuals - Which triggers financial crisis and hence reduce output • Bank deposit & private credit having positive impact on output - More robust when funds mobilisation is matched with allocation - When financial intermediaries are efficient - In transforming large portion of deposits into credit

  24. OBJECTIVE 2: To identify the channels through which finance influence output • Financial development promoting output mostly through physical capital accumulation • Financial development (credits) also influences output, through human capital - By easing borrowing constraints - Household access to financial resources and better plan expenditure on human capital accumulation • On the contrary, financial deposits have weak and even negative effect on human capital accumulation - Low deposit rate paid by banks - Loss of savings arising from financial crises in the region • To a lesser extent, financial development influences output through productivity - Thereby, validating the argument that in developing countries - Financial intermediaries have less capacity to evaluate projects - And bank loans are largely based personal connection

  25. OBJECTIVE 3: To determine the causal relationship between finance and output • Output growth Granger causes monetary growth and bank deposit - As output increases, level of income also increases - Thus causing savings with the banking sector - Bank deposit being a component of broad money cause it to increase • Bank credit and the ratio of bank credit to bank deposit causes output • Bidirectional causality: financial sector deposit and credit and output - Activities of non-bank financial intermediaries - Leading to increase in output, in turn, leads to more deposits in and loans from such institutions • Overall, financial development and output mutually dependent - Growth process benefits from financial development - Which provides basis for increase in savings, - Thereby leading to more financial development

  26. CONCLUSIONS • Narrower measures of financial development have positive impact on output in ECOWAS • While broader measures have negative impact on output • Physical capital accumulation is the major channel through which financial development influences output • Human capital and productivity serving lesser roles • While bank credit causes output, output on other hand causes broad money and bank deposit growth • Bidirectional causality among output, financial sector deposits and credit

  27. POLICY IMPLICATIONS • Growth of money supply be aligned with the real economic activities • Financial policy reforms - Should aim at increasing access to finance and financial services - To both household and private sectors - By eliminating/mitigating the factors that hinder access to finance - Also be reciprocated by corresponding reforms in the structure of the real economy 3. Banks and other financial intermediaries - Should enhance their capacities to effectively evaluate projects - Such that the productivity channel can work 4. Policy incentives be provided to financial institutions - To enable them provide more loans to household sector - Especially human capital/education related loans

  28. JOURNALS

  29. CONFERENCES ATTENDED

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