Financial Integration and Financial Development: Evidence from Sub-Saharan African (SSA) Countries

  • E. Olalekan Obademi
  • Abass, Shiro
  • Ojumu, Olayiwola
Keywords: Keywords: Financial Development, Gross Private Capital Flows, Dynamic Panel SYS- GMMAnalysis

Abstract

The study examined the effects of financial integration on financial development for 49 Sub-Saharan

Africa (SSA) countries for the period 2002 to 2021. Five independent metrics of financial development

and two financial integration measures were utilized to ensure robustness of the anticipated results.

Using a dynamic panel GMM-SYS estimation technique, it was discovered that the impacts of

financial integration on financial development in SSA are highly dependent on the proxies employed

to capture these two variables of financial integration. Financial integration has a beneficial

influence on private sector credit, domestic credit, liquid liabilities, and finance size, when proxied by

the interest rate spread. However, this measure of financial integration limits the volume of financial

activity of financial intermediaries as it’s negatively correlated. Similarly, when measured using gross

private capital flows, financial integration has statistically positive effects on financial development as

measured by liquid liabilities but has a negative impact on financial development as measured by

finance activity and financial size in Sub-Saharan African nations. The general implication of these

findings is that the influence of financial integration on financial development in SSA is complex.

However, before reaching a firm conclusion about the relationship between these two variables,

several transmission mechanisms by which former influences the latter, as well as their various

proxies, must be considered

Published
2023-09-29