Did Global Financial Crisis Worsen Oil Price Volatility and Banking Sector Nexus in Selected ECOWAS and G-7 Member Countries?
Abstract
This study examined the effects of global financial crisis on oil prices and its relationship with banking sector in selected ECOWAS and G-7 group for the period 2000 to 2018. The data for the study were collected from the WDI (2019). Following the work of Driscoll & Kraay (1998), the study adopted panel fixed effect estimation techniques. Since financial crises affect mostly the banking system and banking reforms is reflected in the lending interest rate which is a positive contributor to the rate of investment growth, we therefore estimated the model using investment as the dependent variable. The results show that the lending interest rates exert positive impact on the rate of investment growth for G7 countries. Furthermore, we observed that 1% drop in interest rate would cause investment to grow by about 0.0378% for the ECOWAS region. The interaction of the international oil prices and the rate of inflation express the cost of production in the regions. Thus, it was found that a 1 percent increase in the cost of production would cause a fall in the level of investment growth by 0.000029% and 0.000058% for the G7 and ECOWAS respectively. This result though was found not to be significant, thus not reliable. In G7 and ECOWAS, growth in output was found to positively and significantly influence the growth rate of investment.Keywords: Financial crisis, oil price, banking sectorJEL Classifications: G01, Q49, G21DOI: https://doi.org/10.32479/ijeep.9961Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Downloads
Published
2020-10-10
How to Cite
Manasseh, C. O., Ihedimma, G. I., Abada, F. C., Nwakoby, I. C., Njoku, B. O., Kesuh, J. T., … Onwumere, J. U. J. (2020). Did Global Financial Crisis Worsen Oil Price Volatility and Banking Sector Nexus in Selected ECOWAS and G-7 Member Countries?. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 10(6), 390–395. Retrieved from https://mail.econjournals.com/index.php/ijeep/article/view/9961
Issue
Section
Articles