Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies

Literature findings on the relationship between capital account liberalization and economic growth appear mixed. This phenomenon is even more prominent in the case of emerging markets. Investigations were thereby carried out to determine the effects of capital account liberalisation, and if such eff...

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Main Authors: Koh, Kai Vern, Shin, Yen Nee, Ong, Shannen Si Hui
Other Authors: Chia Wai Mun
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73778
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-737782019-12-10T11:03:48Z Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies Koh, Kai Vern Shin, Yen Nee Ong, Shannen Si Hui Chia Wai Mun School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences Literature findings on the relationship between capital account liberalization and economic growth appear mixed. This phenomenon is even more prominent in the case of emerging markets. Investigations were thereby carried out to determine the effects of capital account liberalisation, and if such effects vary based on the type of the economy. Additionally, a corollary hypothesis considers differing impacts on capital account openness given the presence of other variables. De jure measures of capital account openness were used as part of the research, concerning data for 47 emerging and advanced countries from 1960 onwards. Potential interactive impacts of the capital account openness indicator were included to extend findings on the possible association and dependency with other variables. Quadratic effects were employed in this literature to address possible differing effects of capital account openness between emerging and advanced economies. OLS, GMM-SYS estimators and pooled time series were used to study for possible growth regressors and its effect on economic growth rates. Our findings show a positive association between capital account liberalisation with subsequent growth in both emerging and advanced economies. Such effects of the capital account openness index remain robust even after we consider for other variables such as black-market premium, corruption and regulatory quality. Compared to advanced economies, emerging countries were found to gain higher economic growth with capital account openness. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-10T06:10:03Z 2018-04-10T06:10:03Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73778 en Nanyang Technological University 46 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Koh, Kai Vern
Shin, Yen Nee
Ong, Shannen Si Hui
Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
description Literature findings on the relationship between capital account liberalization and economic growth appear mixed. This phenomenon is even more prominent in the case of emerging markets. Investigations were thereby carried out to determine the effects of capital account liberalisation, and if such effects vary based on the type of the economy. Additionally, a corollary hypothesis considers differing impacts on capital account openness given the presence of other variables. De jure measures of capital account openness were used as part of the research, concerning data for 47 emerging and advanced countries from 1960 onwards. Potential interactive impacts of the capital account openness indicator were included to extend findings on the possible association and dependency with other variables. Quadratic effects were employed in this literature to address possible differing effects of capital account openness between emerging and advanced economies. OLS, GMM-SYS estimators and pooled time series were used to study for possible growth regressors and its effect on economic growth rates. Our findings show a positive association between capital account liberalisation with subsequent growth in both emerging and advanced economies. Such effects of the capital account openness index remain robust even after we consider for other variables such as black-market premium, corruption and regulatory quality. Compared to advanced economies, emerging countries were found to gain higher economic growth with capital account openness.
author2 Chia Wai Mun
author_facet Chia Wai Mun
Koh, Kai Vern
Shin, Yen Nee
Ong, Shannen Si Hui
format Final Year Project
author Koh, Kai Vern
Shin, Yen Nee
Ong, Shannen Si Hui
author_sort Koh, Kai Vern
title Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
title_short Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
title_full Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
title_fullStr Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
title_full_unstemmed Capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
title_sort capital account liberalisation on economic growth: a perspective from emerging economies
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73778
_version_ 1681034843039727616