Abstract

This essay provides a better comprehension of the other disregarded impacts of FDI by examining first, the causality direction then the long- and short-term interaction among inward FDI and financial development in Guinea using 1990-2017 data set.
 
 The empirical assertions are grounded on the Granger causality wald test, Bounds test for co-integration, Error correction model (ECM) and the Auto regressive distributed lag (ARDL) framework. FDI per GDP net inflows and Credit to private sector are respectively adopted as FDI measure and financial advancement indicator. The following outcomes are established: first, FDI in the long term negatively influence financial advancement in Guinea at 5% magnitude. This inference indicates that 1 percent surge in FDI per GDP induces 0.389 decrease in credit to private sector. Second, FDI per GDP [L1] negatively and significantly interact with financial advancement in the short term. Suggesting that 1 percent increase in FDI in the short term engenders 0.215 decrease in credit to private sector. Third, the causality direction remains unidirectional irrespective to the number of lags. Finally, the long- and short-term coefficients tell us the same story regardless of the time effects. Overall, contrary to the common perceptions, we found strong evidence that foreign investment does not enhance financial development in Guinea. In terms of practical implications, it seems ineffective to use FDI as financial advancement instrument within the Guinean context.

Highlights

  • IntroductionForeign Direct Investments have experienced a substantial increase

  • During the last decades, Foreign Direct Investments have experienced a substantial increase

  • The effect of inward foreign investment on recipient countries has been widely acknowledged while its influence on financial development has not been well approached, especially in the Guinean context

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Foreign Direct Investments have experienced a substantial increase. Over the period 1980-1985, Inward FDI in Africa raised from 41 million USD to 1.06 billion USD over 2003-2007 representing 99% average growth. Foreign capital has become an essential provenance of outward funds that supplement internal investment, especially for African nations whose current development stage necessitate colossal amount of cash (Seetanah, 2009). This ever-raising portion of inward foreign capital led scholars to assess the impact of FDI along diverse facets: welfare (Gohou & Soumaré, 2012); technology transfer (Kim, 2008); employment (Jude & Silaghi, 2016); competitiveness (Zhang, 2014). Little observation has been paid to the issue of whether foreign investment can enhance or stimulate financial advancement, especially in Guinea

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call