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Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC

There is a constant need to seek new catalysts for economic growth in various regions of the world, particularly within Sub-Saharan Africa. Financial development and remittances could be potential catalysts, but this has been strongly debated in empirical research. This study, therefore, analysed th...

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Main Author: Namutebi, Irene Juliet
Other Authors: Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Namutebi, Irene Juliet
author2 Alhassan, Abdul Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Namutebi, Irene Juliet
author_facet Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Namutebi, Irene Juliet
author_sort Namutebi, Irene Juliet
collection Thesis
description There is a constant need to seek new catalysts for economic growth in various regions of the world, particularly within Sub-Saharan Africa. Financial development and remittances could be potential catalysts, but this has been strongly debated in empirical research. This study, therefore, analysed the financial development-remittance-growth nexus, but from the context of the Southern African Development Community from 2004 to 2014. The aim of this study was two-fold. Firstly, it analysed the short-run dynamics of interaction between various aspects of financial development and remittances on the economic growth rate (real gross domestic product). Secondly, it analysed the long-run dynamics. In this study four broad institutional channels of financial development were analysed, namely, access, depth, efficiency, and stability. The empirical model was estimated using the two-stage least-squares technique and the two-step system generalised method of moments technique. The empirical findings showed a significant relationship with the interaction between financial efficiency and remittances on the economic growth rate, but only in the short run (ceteris paribus). However, this study could not establish whether this interaction had a positive or negative effect on the economic growth rate. Nonetheless, financial access and financial stability had a significantly negative effect on the economic growth rate, both in the short and long run (ceteris paribus). Remittances and foreign direct investments generally had an insignificant effect on the economic growth rate (ceteris paribus). Further findings suggest that remittances were a-cyclical in nature. Overall, it is recommended that policy discussions analyse implications of increasing competition among financial institutions and remittance service providers to reduce intermediation costs.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:38.153Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32355 Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC Namutebi, Irene Juliet Alhassan, Abdul Latif Development Finance There is a constant need to seek new catalysts for economic growth in various regions of the world, particularly within Sub-Saharan Africa. Financial development and remittances could be potential catalysts, but this has been strongly debated in empirical research. This study, therefore, analysed the financial development-remittance-growth nexus, but from the context of the Southern African Development Community from 2004 to 2014. The aim of this study was two-fold. Firstly, it analysed the short-run dynamics of interaction between various aspects of financial development and remittances on the economic growth rate (real gross domestic product). Secondly, it analysed the long-run dynamics. In this study four broad institutional channels of financial development were analysed, namely, access, depth, efficiency, and stability. The empirical model was estimated using the two-stage least-squares technique and the two-step system generalised method of moments technique. The empirical findings showed a significant relationship with the interaction between financial efficiency and remittances on the economic growth rate, but only in the short run (ceteris paribus). However, this study could not establish whether this interaction had a positive or negative effect on the economic growth rate. Nonetheless, financial access and financial stability had a significantly negative effect on the economic growth rate, both in the short and long run (ceteris paribus). Remittances and foreign direct investments generally had an insignificant effect on the economic growth rate (ceteris paribus). Further findings suggest that remittances were a-cyclical in nature. Overall, it is recommended that policy discussions analyse implications of increasing competition among financial institutions and remittance service providers to reduce intermediation costs. 2020-11-02T10:29:12Z 2020-11-02T10:29:12Z 2020 2020-11-02T10:28:54Z Master Thesis Masters MCOM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32355 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Development Finance
Namutebi, Irene Juliet
Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC
title_full Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC
title_fullStr Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC
title_full_unstemmed Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC
title_short Financial Development Channels and Remittances in the SADC
title_sort financial development channels and remittances in the sadc
topic Development Finance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32355
work_keys_str_mv AT namutebiirenejuliet financialdevelopmentchannelsandremittancesinthesadc