Abstract

ABSTRACT The aim of this paper is to investigate whether financial development and trade openness enhance economic growth in 11 new EU member states. While the overwhelming studies employ a simple measure of finance (credit to GDP ratio or stock market capitalization), we run growth regressions using a new IMF broad-based measure, which covers three dimensions of financial development: depth, access, and efficiency. We use a bootstrap panel-data approach based on seemingly unrelated regression (SUR) systems, which takes into account cross-sectional dependency and slope heterogeneity among countries. Such an approach gives separate regression coefficients for each country. The main findings are as follows: (1) the statistically significant unidirectional Granger causality from finance to economic growth is evidenced in five countries under examination (Bulgaria, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, and Slovenia); (2) trade openness is statistically significant Granger-cause of growth in six new EU member states (Croatia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia); (3) the reverse causalities, i.e. running from growth to finance were found in two countries (Hungary and Slovenia), and from growth to trade openness in Croatia. The policy-oriented recommendation is that new EU member states from Central and Eastern Europe may gain pro-growth benefits from further finance and trade development, however, the policy-makers should be aware of possible nonlinearities and conditionality of these relationships.

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