Financial inclusion and financial sector development in Sub-Saharan Africa: a panel VAR approach

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the dynamic link between financial inclusion and financial sector development (FSD) in Sub-Saharan Africa.Design/methodology/approachThis paper employs a panel vector autoregressive framework to examine the dynamic link between financial inclusion a...

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Veröffentlicht in:International Journal of Managerial Finance 2019-08, Vol.15 (4), p.444-463
Hauptverfasser: Anarfo, Ebenezer Bugri, Abor, Joshua Yindenaba, Osei, Kofi Achampong, Gyeke-Dako, Agyapomaa
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 444
container_title International Journal of Managerial Finance
container_volume 15
creator Anarfo, Ebenezer Bugri
Abor, Joshua Yindenaba
Osei, Kofi Achampong
Gyeke-Dako, Agyapomaa
description PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the dynamic link between financial inclusion and financial sector development (FSD) in Sub-Saharan Africa.Design/methodology/approachThis paper employs a panel vector autoregressive framework to examine the dynamic link between financial inclusion and FSD in Sub-Saharan Africa.FindingsThe findings indicate that there is a reverse causality between FSD and financial inclusion in both the Sub-Saharan Africa countries sample and the full sample. It is evident that financial inclusion is a driver of FSD and vice versa.Practical implicationsThe practical implication of this study is that financial inclusion should not only be pursued as a policy objective but it could also be an outcome variable of FSD and vice versa. This implies that African economies and governments in their effort to enhance financial inclusion, FSD can serve as a policy tool. This means that policies aimed at promoting financial inclusion will not impede FSD because the two are complementary. This suggests that we can achieve financial inclusion without sacrificing FSD and vice versa.Originality/valueThis paper provides first empirical evidence of the link between financial inclusion and FSD from the Sub-Saharan Africa perspective using data sourced from World Development Indicators spanning from 1990 to 2014 for 48 Sub-Saharan African economies and 217 economies in the world for the full sample.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/IJMF-07-2018-0205
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source Emerald Journals; Standard: Emerald eJournal Premier Collection
subjects Causality
Commercial banks
Decomposition
Economic development
Economic growth
Economic models
Financial inclusion
Financial services
Income inequality
Low income groups
Poverty
Principal components analysis
Researchers
Small & medium sized enterprises-SME
Studies
Variables
title Financial inclusion and financial sector development in Sub-Saharan Africa: a panel VAR approach
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