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Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa

The finance-growth literature identifies financial integration as a vital catalyst for driving the growth performance of both nascent and advanced economies. Financial integration is viewed as a process by which technology and capital is mobilized and efficiently distributed across national borders...

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Main Author: Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious
Other Authors: Biekpe, Nicholas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious
author2 Biekpe, Nicholas
author_browse Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious
Biekpe, Nicholas
author_facet Biekpe, Nicholas
Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious
author_sort Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious
collection Thesis
description The finance-growth literature identifies financial integration as a vital catalyst for driving the growth performance of both nascent and advanced economies. Financial integration is viewed as a process by which technology and capital is mobilized and efficiently distributed across national borders to enhance consumption, investments and output growth. However, the benefits of financial integration for economic growth are not unanimous and sometimes evade even the most advanced economies. To promote economic growth, financial integration is required to stimulate competition and efficiency in domestic banking markets without eroding bank profitability or stability. Understanding the effects of deeper financial integration on the conduct and performance of banks and economic growth therefore forms the central theme of this thesis. The study employs several panel data estimation methods to test these hypotheses using data from 405 banks across 47 African countries over the period 2007-2014 and compares the results for five sub-regional markets. The findings reveal that deeper financial integration has significant positive effects on overall bank profitability in Africa. Specifically, the study finds that financial freedom and cross-border banking enhance bank profitability in Africa and across the regional economic communities. The study finds that higher operating cost in the 2007-2014 period reduced bank return on assets but increased overall bank profitability. This reflects the need for banks in underdeveloped banking markets to increase their diversification, expansion and advertising costs in periods of integration and rising competition to ensure overall profitability. The study also finds a direct negative relationship between deeper financial integration and competition changes on bank stability. However, the findings support a U-shaped relationship between competition and bank stability, suggesting that beyond certain thresholds, higher competition will induce greater stability in Africa‘s banking markets. This study, therefore, identifies deficiency of competitiveness as a fundamental variable hindering emerging markets from enjoying the stability benefits of financial integration. Quality regulation and control of corruption are also identified as vital factors for improving bank stability in Africa. The study further shows that financial integration enhances competition, efficiency and bank lending behavior in Africa, resulting in banking convergence in Africa and the regional economic communities. In examining the causal nexus between competition and bank efficiency, the results support the quiet-life hypothesis in Africa, especially in the EAC and reject the quiet-life hypothesis in the AMU and ECCAS sub-regions. The study further finds evidence of the efficient-structure hypothesis in Africa, especially in the AMU and SADC sub-regions. Also, though the study finds no significant nexus between financial integration, bank lending and economic growth in Africa, the evidence supports the feedback hypothesis in the EAC while the supply-leading hypothesis is supported in the AMU, ECCAS and ECOWAS sub-regions. Also, while a positive causal nexus from financial integration to economic growth exist in the AMU sub-region, this relationship is negative in the ECCAS sub-region. Overall, the results suggest that the effect of financial integration on bank performance and economic growth vary significantly across the regional economic communities of Africa. It is, therefore, imperative for bank managers, regulators and policy makers to pursue tailored interventions for each regional economic community while exploiting opportunities for inter-REC collaborations and peer-learning for Africa‘s gross integration and growth.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30401 Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious Biekpe, Nicholas The finance-growth literature identifies financial integration as a vital catalyst for driving the growth performance of both nascent and advanced economies. Financial integration is viewed as a process by which technology and capital is mobilized and efficiently distributed across national borders to enhance consumption, investments and output growth. However, the benefits of financial integration for economic growth are not unanimous and sometimes evade even the most advanced economies. To promote economic growth, financial integration is required to stimulate competition and efficiency in domestic banking markets without eroding bank profitability or stability. Understanding the effects of deeper financial integration on the conduct and performance of banks and economic growth therefore forms the central theme of this thesis. The study employs several panel data estimation methods to test these hypotheses using data from 405 banks across 47 African countries over the period 2007-2014 and compares the results for five sub-regional markets. The findings reveal that deeper financial integration has significant positive effects on overall bank profitability in Africa. Specifically, the study finds that financial freedom and cross-border banking enhance bank profitability in Africa and across the regional economic communities. The study finds that higher operating cost in the 2007-2014 period reduced bank return on assets but increased overall bank profitability. This reflects the need for banks in underdeveloped banking markets to increase their diversification, expansion and advertising costs in periods of integration and rising competition to ensure overall profitability. The study also finds a direct negative relationship between deeper financial integration and competition changes on bank stability. However, the findings support a U-shaped relationship between competition and bank stability, suggesting that beyond certain thresholds, higher competition will induce greater stability in Africa‘s banking markets. This study, therefore, identifies deficiency of competitiveness as a fundamental variable hindering emerging markets from enjoying the stability benefits of financial integration. Quality regulation and control of corruption are also identified as vital factors for improving bank stability in Africa. The study further shows that financial integration enhances competition, efficiency and bank lending behavior in Africa, resulting in banking convergence in Africa and the regional economic communities. In examining the causal nexus between competition and bank efficiency, the results support the quiet-life hypothesis in Africa, especially in the EAC and reject the quiet-life hypothesis in the AMU and ECCAS sub-regions. The study further finds evidence of the efficient-structure hypothesis in Africa, especially in the AMU and SADC sub-regions. Also, though the study finds no significant nexus between financial integration, bank lending and economic growth in Africa, the evidence supports the feedback hypothesis in the EAC while the supply-leading hypothesis is supported in the AMU, ECCAS and ECOWAS sub-regions. Also, while a positive causal nexus from financial integration to economic growth exist in the AMU sub-region, this relationship is negative in the ECCAS sub-region. Overall, the results suggest that the effect of financial integration on bank performance and economic growth vary significantly across the regional economic communities of Africa. It is, therefore, imperative for bank managers, regulators and policy makers to pursue tailored interventions for each regional economic community while exploiting opportunities for inter-REC collaborations and peer-learning for Africa‘s gross integration and growth. 2019-08-01T08:31:27Z 2019-08-01T08:31:27Z 2019 2019-07-31T07:19:28Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30401 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Banyen, Kannyiri Thadious
Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa
title_full Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa
title_fullStr Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa
title_short Financial integration, bank performance and economic growth in Africa
title_sort financial integration bank performance and economic growth in africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30401
work_keys_str_mv AT banyenkannyirithadious financialintegrationbankperformanceandeconomicgrowthinafrica