
Publication Information
Published by: Admin
Published: 2 years ago
View:
Pages: 33
ISBN:
Abstract
While it is clear that financial depth and economic diversity are prerequisites for the realisation of growth and development objectives, heterogeneous factors that determines financial development remains imperfectly understood. This ambiguity in the structural relations between varied causative factors is more pronounced in Africa where conditions for growth and development remains inadequately met. Underexplored aspects such as geographic, political, economic and macroeconomic policy determinant of financial development in Africa could have culminated into the misalignment of the continent financialisation strategies. This paper takes the lead, diverse and holistic approach to assign numerical weights to these unobserved factors to reach conclusions that can redefine policy and research on Africa's financialisation objectives. We compared result along with the mean group (MG), common correlated effect mean group (CCEMG) and Augmented Mean Group (AMG) estimators but relied on the AMG results because of its high precision, relevance and superiority in addressing core issues of cross-sectional dependence and slope homogeneity of regressors.Based on the AMG results, we found geographic, economic and macroeconomic policy factors to lead to financial development in Africa. However, our political/institutional composite index inversely relate to financial development in Africa. This counter-intuitive outcome could be due to Africa, age-long weak institutional capacities. Policy implications were discussed.
Ibrahim A. Adekunle Mr.
Tolulope O. Williams
Olumuyiwa G. Yinusa
Rahmon A. Folami
Related Publications

VOLUME 7 ISSUE 4 2024
Governance in mitigating the effect of oil wealth on wealth inequality: a cross-country analysis of policy thresholds
The study assesses the role of governance in modul

VOLUME 7 ISSUE 4 2024
Remittances and the Future of African Economies
African nations have in time, passed over-relied o

VOLUME 7 ISSUE 4 2024
Remittances, Natural Resource Rent and Economic Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa
Despite the established link between oil rent fluc