Abstract:
At the end of a civil war which has lasted over three decades- in Sri Lanka, economy of the country has started to improve. Therefore, it would be interesting for the policy makers to identify how the economic growth has reacted to the financial development indicators. Economic growth was represented by Nominal Per Capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and the financial development indicators were represented by Ratio of Narrow Money to Nominal Per Capita Gnp (MNSPI), Ratio of Broad Money to Narrow Money (M2MJ), Ratio of Private Sector Credit to Nominal Per Capita GDP (PSCR) and Ratio of Private Sector Credit to Total Domestic Credit (PCTC). Various econometric tests were used to identify the nature of both long and short term impact on GDP using annual data of the corresponding variables from 1977 to 2010. Augmented Dickey-Fuller and Phillips-Perron unit root tests confirmed that none of the series is stationary at level zero. This confirms that there is short-term and long-term relationship among financial indicators as well financial indicators with GDP. Johansen's Multivariate Cointegration and Vector Error Correction Modelling (VECM) indicated that the selected financial development indicators significantly impact either short or long term on the GDP of the country. The Ratio of Private Sector Credit to Nominal Per Capita GDP and the Ratio of Private Sector Credit to Total Domestic Credit showed strong significant negative impacts on Per Capita Gross Domestic Product. The Ratio of Narrow Money Supply on Nominal Per Capita GDP showed significantly negative impact on Per Capita Gross Domestic Product. The results would be useful how business and industry played on the economy of the country since 1977 and also to Central Bank to maintain low inflation and a low level of unemployment in the country without artificially influencing the demand for goods by increasing or decreasing the nation's money supply.
Citation:
Wijeratne, C.D. (2012). Impact of financial development on economic growth: causal evidence from sri lanka [Master's theses, University of Moratuwa]. Institutional Repository University of Moratuwa. http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/11779