Financial Sector Development and Poverty Reduction in Nigeria: A Vector Autoregression Analysis (1980-2010)
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Keywords

Financial sector development, Poverty, Poverty reduction, Nigeria.

How to Cite

Dauda, R. O. S., & Makinde, K. O. (2014). Financial Sector Development and Poverty Reduction in Nigeria: A Vector Autoregression Analysis (1980-2010). Asian Economic and Financial Review, 4(8), 1040–1061. Retrieved from https://archive.aessweb.com/index.php/5002/article/view/1235

Abstract

This study examines the nexus between financial sector development and poverty reduction in Nigeria using Vector autoregressive (VAR) model. The choice of the study has been motivated by the alleged failure of the financial sector development in bringing about a reduction in the worsening trend in poverty incidence in Nigeria. The evidences from both the VAR and impulse response show that the indirect effect of economic growth exerts the strongest influence on poverty reduction in the short run but could be detrimental to the poor in the long run due to the adverse effect of income inequality. Furthermore, the relationship between poverty and the financial deepening proxied by broad money supply (M2) is negative and significant. Hence, the McKinnon conduit effect is the likely main transmission channel through which the poor benefit from the financial sector development in the long run. The study, however, concludes that credits to private sector, contrary to the general belief, have failed to cause a reduction in the incidence of poverty in Nigeria.

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