Abstract

Purpose Globalization occupies a central research activity and remains an increasingly controversial phenomenon in economics. This phenomenon corresponds to a subject that can be criticized through its impact on national economies. On the other hand, the world economy is evolving in a liberalized environment in which foreign direct investment plays a fundamental role in the economic development of each country. The advent of financial flows – foreign direct investment, remittances and official development assistance – can be a key factor in the development of the economy. The purpose of this study is to analyze the effect of financial flows on economic growth in developing countries. Empirically, different approaches have been used. As part of this study, an attempt was made to use a combined autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) panel approach to study the short-term and long-run effects of financial flows on economic growth. The results indicate ambiguous effects. Economically, the effect of financial flows on economic growth depends on the investor’s expectations. Design/methodology/approach To study the short-run and long-run effects of financial flows on economic growth, this paper considers an empirical approach based on the panel ARDL. This model makes it possible to distinguish between the short-run effect and the long-run one. This type of model is based on three estimators, namely, mean group, pooled mean group (PMG) and dynamic fixed effect. Findings Results confirm the existence of a long-run relationship because the adjustment coefficient (error correction parameter) is negative and statistically significant. This paper finds that the PMG estimator is more consistent and more efficient. In the short-run, foreign direct investment do negatively affect economic growth, the effect is no significant in the long-run. On the other hand, the effect of remittances on economic growth is significant in the short-run. However, it is no significant in the long-run. Finally, the results suggest that the effect of official development assistance on economic growth is insignificant; both in the long-run and in the short-run. Originality/value To study the interaction between financial flows and economic growth, some empirical methodology are used such as the dynamic panel data and the autoregressive vector (VAR) model. In this study, we apply the panel ARDL model to analyze the short-run and the long-run effect for each financial flow on economic growth. The objective is to study the heterogeneity on dynamic adjustment in the short-term and long-term.

Highlights

  • The relationship among foreign direct investment, remittances, official development assistance and economic growth is yet to receive unanimous agreement among researchers and policymakers

  • This paper examines the causal relationship between foreign direct investment (FDI), official development assistance (ODA) and foreign remittances with that of economic growth of developing countries in particular middle income countries

  • 2.1 Specificity of the panel autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) Having mentioned the definitions of the variables and studying the long run effect of FDI, migrant remittances and official development assistance on economic growth, we use the following equation as the basic model: gross domestic product (GDP) per capitait 1⁄4 a0 þ a1FDIit þ a2transferts of remittances ðTRÞit þ a3official development assistance ðODAÞit þ « it GDP per capitait is the per capita GDP growth rate for country i at date t, FDIit is the stock of FDI as a percentage of GDP, transferts of remittances (TR)it is the transfer of migrants as a percentage of GDP, official development assistance (ODA)it is the official development assistance as a percentage of gross national product and « it is the error term

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Summary

December 2020 Accepted 9 December 2020

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Introduction
The mean group estimator
Findings
Conclusion and policy implications
Full Text
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