Financial Development and Economic Activity in Advanced and Developing Open Economies: Evidence from Panel Cointegration
This study considers the effects of financial development on output in a panel cointegration framework, focusing on the implications of trade and financial openness. Our analysis indicates that after controlling for cross-sectional dependence, the typical relationship between finance and output does not hold in the long run. This relationship, however, is re-established once we account for economic openness. While trade openness emerges as more important for developing countries, financial openness is more important for advanced economies. In the long run, causality runs from financial development to output in the advanced economies, while in developing economies causality is bidirectional. There is no short-run causality between financial development and output, however.
Year of publication: |
2015
|
---|---|
Authors: | Chortareas, Georgios ; Magkonis, Georgios ; Moschos, Demetrios ; Panagiotidis, Theodore |
Published in: |
Review of Development Economics. - Wiley Blackwell. - Vol. 19.2015, 1, p. 163-177
|
Publisher: |
Wiley Blackwell |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Inflation targeting and inflation convergence: International evidence
Arestis, Philip, (2014)
-
Chortareas, Georgios E., (2015)
-
Inflation targeting and inflation convergence : international evidence
Arestis, Philip, (2014)
- More ...