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Life insurance, financial development and economic growth in south africa: an application of the autoregressive distributed lag mode

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dc.contributor.author Sibindi, A.B.
dc.date.accessioned 2016-04-19T08:21:34Z
dc.date.available 2016-04-19T08:21:34Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.identifier.citation Sibindi, A.B. (2014) Life insurance, financial development and economic growth in South Africa: an application of the autoregressive distributed lag model. Journal of Risk Governance & Control: Financial Markets & Institutions, 4(4), pp. 81-90 en
dc.identifier.issn 2077-429X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20123
dc.description.abstract The life insurance sector may contribute to economic growth by its very mechanism of savings mobilisation and thereby performing an intermediation role in the economy. This ensures that capital is provided to deficient units who are in need of capital to finance their working capital requirements and invest in technology thereby resulting in an increase in output. In this way, it could be argued that life insurance development spurs financial development. In this article we investigate the causal relationship between the life insurance sector, financial development and economic growth in South Africa for the period 1990 to 2012 by applying the ARDL bounds testing procedure. We make use of life insurance density as the proxy for life insurance development, real per capita growth domestic product as the proxy for economic growth and real broad money per capita as the proxy for financial development. We test for cointegration amongst the variables by applying the bounds test and then proceed to test for Granger causality based on the error correction model. Our results confirm that the variables are cointegrated and move in tandem to each other in the long-run. The results also indicate that the direction of causality runs from the economy to the life insurance sector in the short-run which is consistent with the “demand-following” insurance-growth hypothesis. There is also evidence of bidirectional Granger causality running from the economy to financial development and vice versa, both in the long-run and short-run. The results also reveal that life insurance complements financial development in bringing about economic growth further lending credence to the “complementarity” en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Life Insurance, en
dc.subject Financial Development, en
dc.subject Economic growth, en
dc.subject Granger Causality, en
dc.subject ARDL en
dc.subject Bounds Test, en
dc.subject South Africa en
dc.title Life insurance, financial development and economic growth in south africa: an application of the autoregressive distributed lag mode en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Finance, Risk Management and Banking en


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