Impact of Financial Intermediaries on Nigerian Economic Growth

Charles O. Manasseh, Johnson I. Okoh, Felicia C. Abada, Jonathan E. Ogbuabor, Felix C. Alio, Adedoyin I. Lawal, Ifeoma C. Nwakoby, Onyinye J. Asogwa

Abstract


This paper empirically investigated the impact of financial intermediation of economic growth in Nigeria. Quarterly time series data generated from the World Bank Development indicator and the Nigerian Bureau of Statistic for the periods 1994Q1 to 2018q4 were used for the analysis, and Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regression technique was adopted for the estimation of the hypotheses. Per-capita GDP was used as a measure of economic growth, while bank deposit, bank credit and bank reserves are measures of financial intermediation. Further investigation also show that bank deposit is positively and significantly related to GDPpc, suggesting that increase in bank deposit brings about 0.244193 increases in economic growth. We further observed that bank credit impacted positively on economic growth. Though, the impact was found to be insignificant. Hence, we also found bank reserve to assert significant and positive impacted on economic growth. From the findings, we suggest for good policy reforms that may promote the efficiency and the development of bank which serve as a critical factor for economic growth in Nigeria.


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5430/ijfr.v12n1p348

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


International Journal of Financial Research
ISSN 1923-4023(Print)ISSN 1923-4031(Online)

 

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