Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies

Despite extensive finance-growth literature, the critical role of spatial interdependence between countries has often been overlooked. This paper addresses this gap by utilising spatial Durbin modelling on a 30-year panel dataset of 56 emerging economies, examining the spillover effects of financial...

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Published in:International Journal of Finance and Economics
Main Author: Ahmad M.; Hall S.G.; Law S.H.; Nayan S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons Ltd 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85200054628&doi=10.1002%2fijfe.3025&partnerID=40&md5=2ae061bbf82a5a09b411625e12b50ee2
id 2-s2.0-85200054628
spelling 2-s2.0-85200054628
Ahmad M.; Hall S.G.; Law S.H.; Nayan S.
Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
2024
International Journal of Finance and Economics


10.1002/ijfe.3025
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85200054628&doi=10.1002%2fijfe.3025&partnerID=40&md5=2ae061bbf82a5a09b411625e12b50ee2
Despite extensive finance-growth literature, the critical role of spatial interdependence between countries has often been overlooked. This paper addresses this gap by utilising spatial Durbin modelling on a 30-year panel dataset of 56 emerging economies, examining the spillover effects of financial development (FD) and institutions on economic growth. The findings reveal FD has a significant positive within-country impact on growth; on average, FD is expected to raise growth by approximately 5.8% holding other factors constant. Meanwhile, the FD spillover effect on growth is estimated to be around 10 times its within-country effect, which is not surprising given that the 10-nearest-neighbour is the preferred matrix for conceptualising the spatial dependence between the countries under study. The results however show no evidence of significant threshold effect of FD. Political institutions emerge as the most influential in driving growth both within and across countries, whereas improvement in economic institutions moderates the growth-effect of FD. FD's within-country effect on growth is largely driven by financial institutions, while its spillover effect stems primarily from the neighbours' financial markets. The findings' robustness is confirmed through a battery of tests. In conclusion, this study offers valuable insights into the complex finance-institutions-growth nexus in emerging economies. By considering spatial interdependencies and the role of institutions, policymakers can craft effective strategies to harness FD's positive effects and foster an environment for sustained, inclusive economic growth. © 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
10769307
English
Article

author Ahmad M.; Hall S.G.; Law S.H.; Nayan S.
spellingShingle Ahmad M.; Hall S.G.; Law S.H.; Nayan S.
Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
author_facet Ahmad M.; Hall S.G.; Law S.H.; Nayan S.
author_sort Ahmad M.; Hall S.G.; Law S.H.; Nayan S.
title Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
title_short Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
title_full Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
title_fullStr Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
title_full_unstemmed Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
title_sort Spillover effects in the nexus of finance-institutions-growth: New insights from spatial Durbin analysis on emerging economies
publishDate 2024
container_title International Journal of Finance and Economics
container_volume
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ijfe.3025
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85200054628&doi=10.1002%2fijfe.3025&partnerID=40&md5=2ae061bbf82a5a09b411625e12b50ee2
description Despite extensive finance-growth literature, the critical role of spatial interdependence between countries has often been overlooked. This paper addresses this gap by utilising spatial Durbin modelling on a 30-year panel dataset of 56 emerging economies, examining the spillover effects of financial development (FD) and institutions on economic growth. The findings reveal FD has a significant positive within-country impact on growth; on average, FD is expected to raise growth by approximately 5.8% holding other factors constant. Meanwhile, the FD spillover effect on growth is estimated to be around 10 times its within-country effect, which is not surprising given that the 10-nearest-neighbour is the preferred matrix for conceptualising the spatial dependence between the countries under study. The results however show no evidence of significant threshold effect of FD. Political institutions emerge as the most influential in driving growth both within and across countries, whereas improvement in economic institutions moderates the growth-effect of FD. FD's within-country effect on growth is largely driven by financial institutions, while its spillover effect stems primarily from the neighbours' financial markets. The findings' robustness is confirmed through a battery of tests. In conclusion, this study offers valuable insights into the complex finance-institutions-growth nexus in emerging economies. By considering spatial interdependencies and the role of institutions, policymakers can craft effective strategies to harness FD's positive effects and foster an environment for sustained, inclusive economic growth. © 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
publisher John Wiley and Sons Ltd
issn 10769307
language English
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