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1 – 1 of 1Clifford Odame, Kingsley Opoku Appiah and Prince Gyimah
This paper examines the nexus between financial inclusion and the economic growth of an emerging market.
Abstract
Purpose
This paper examines the nexus between financial inclusion and the economic growth of an emerging market.
Design/methodology/approach
We use dataset from the World Bank and Heritage Foundations over the period 2005–2016 and fully modified least squares (FMOLS) and dynamic OLS (DOLS) to examine the financial inclusion–economic growth nexus in Ghana.
Findings
We document a negative relationship between financial inclusion and economic growth, and the causal nexus is unidirectional from financial access to GDP. Financial penetration, however, causes GDP growth, and GDP growth also causes financial penetration. We also document that IT infrastructure, the depth of financial services, employment and inflation drive economic growth in an emerging market.
Practical implications
The findings support international calls to prioritize financial penetration policies geared toward greater economic growth.
Originality/value
The paper adds to extant literature by highlighting new empirical insights on the financial inclusion–economic growth nexus from a sub-Saharan Africa market perspective.
Details