An Analysis of Bond Market Liquidity and Real Sector Output in Selected African Economies

dc.contributor.authorEke, Patrick O.
dc.contributor.authorAdetiloye, Kehinde A
dc.contributor.authorAdegbite, Esther O
dc.contributor.otherEkonomická fakultacs
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-25T08:54:55Z
dc.date.available2020-11-25T08:54:55Z
dc.description.abstractThere is increasing traction in the literature on the activities of the secondary securities’ market especially with bonds on financial development, with little known on its functional linkage to real sector growth. Following popular theories on bond financing, this study sought to fill this gap by examining if functional tie exists between the secondary bond markets and real sector output among fourteen African countries with functional bond markets and complete data. Among the variables adapted for use are real gross domestic product per capital, corporate bond issues, industrial output, corporate bond turnover, financial education, electricity consumption and institutional quality. The study tested through unit roots to augmented Toda-Yamamoto non-causality and co-integration approach to investigate both the short- and long-term relationships among the different variables. A priori, it was expected that market information would engender capital raising through bond issues and fund allocation. The study however, discovers that corporate bond turnover does not cause industrial output growth, neither does it cause corporate bond issue. An important short run result indicates that the impact of financial education is gradually being felt in the bond markets. For most of the long-run relationships, the study accepted the Null hypothesis. This implies that the investing public do not absorb the usefulness of the market information, which may explain the thinness and shallowness of African corporate bond market overtime. The liquidity signalling effects is however found to influence regulatory institutional quality in the long-run. An accelerated financial market liberalization and tax incentives for private sector provision of market infrastructure are recommended among others for improvement in the African bond markets investigated, among others.en
dc.formattext
dc.identifier.doi10.15240/tul/001/2020-4-011
dc.identifier.eissn2336-5604
dc.identifier.issn1212-3609
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.tul.cz/handle/15240/158180
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherTechnická Univerzita v Libercics
dc.publisherTechnical university of Liberec, Czech Republicen
dc.publisher.abbreviationTUL
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dc.relation.ispartofEkonomie a Managementcs
dc.relation.ispartofEconomics and Managementen
dc.relation.isrefereedtrue
dc.rightsCC BY-NC
dc.subjectafrican economiesen
dc.subjectbond issuing marketen
dc.subjectbond market liquidityen
dc.subjectreal sector output growthen
dc.subject.classificationN27
dc.subject.classificationC40
dc.subject.classificationE23
dc.titleAn Analysis of Bond Market Liquidity and Real Sector Output in Selected African Economiesen
dc.typeArticleen
local.accessopen
local.citation.epage181
local.citation.spage166
local.facultyFaculty of Economics
local.filenameEM_4_2020_11
local.fulltextyes
local.relation.abbreviationE+Mcs
local.relation.abbreviationE&Men
local.relation.issue4
local.relation.volume23
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