Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the effects of the capital market on economic growth by considering the role of ṣukūk (Islamic investment certificates) and other capital market sub-components in Malaysia between 1998 and 2018. Design/methodology/approach The empirical investigation is based on the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) cointegration bounds test. Findings The results reveal the prevalence of a long-run equilibrium relationship between capital market variables and economic growth. As expected, bond market components (ṣukūk and conventional bonds) have a positive, albeit insignificant influence on economic growth. In contrast, in the long-term, stock market development – regardless of the indicator used on economic growth – is shown to have a significant and positive effect. The study suggests that stock market sub-components affect Malaysia’s economic growth the most. Research limitations/implications The primary limitation of this study is that only corporate ṣukūk were considered, while government ṣukūk were excluded from the estimation due to a lack of requisite information, resources and data. Practical implications A strategic framework should be established, especially in pricing efficiencies. Furthermore, there is a need to create more awareness on the benefits of ṣukūk investment among conventional bond investors, including retail investors. Thus, there will be more players in the ṣukūk market, and this will help to improve market liquidity. Originality/value Apart from conventional capital market sub-components, this study takes into account ṣukūk as a sub-component in the capital market on economic growth using the ARDL framework. Also, this study particularly concentrates on the world’s largest ṣukūk issuer, Malaysia, rather than focusing on other ṣukūk-issuing countries.

Highlights

  • Linkages between the banking sector and economic growth have been researched extensively

  • The correlation matrix as presented in the same Table (Panel B) signifies that both the conventional bonds and stock market variables are positively linked with real gross domestic product (GDP) per capita

  • LSAVR and stock market capitalization (LSMC) have a strong correlation of 0.9652, which leads to unreliable and unstable parameter estimates and LSAVR is dropped from the model

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Summary

Introduction

Linkages between the banking sector and economic growth have been researched extensively. Research on the capital market questions its relevance to economic growth. ISRA International Journal of Islamic Finance Vol 13 No 1, 2021 pp. © Yan-Ling Tan and Roslina Mohamad Shafi. Published in ISRA International Journal of Islamic Finance. The full terms of this licence maybe seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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