Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development?
This paper examines the effect of strength of family ties on the level of financial development across 80 countries using OLS and IV-2SLS frameworks. We amalgamate two emerging strands of literature, the sources of financial development and the effect that family ties have on economic behaviour. To...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-738562019-12-10T13:52:46Z Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? Lim, Jodyn Zhen Ting San, Pei Ling Ting, Hazel Huong Rui James Ang School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences This paper examines the effect of strength of family ties on the level of financial development across 80 countries using OLS and IV-2SLS frameworks. We amalgamate two emerging strands of literature, the sources of financial development and the effect that family ties have on economic behaviour. To mitigate endogeneity bias, we adopt a novel instrument, wheat suitability ratio, to proxy family ties. Our results reveal that the strength of family ties is significantly and negatively correlated with financial development. Our OLS and IV estimates indicate that a one standard deviation increase in strength of family ties leads to a 37.3% and 24.3% decrease in main financial outcome variable, account respectively. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-17T06:51:36Z 2018-04-17T06:51:36Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73856 en Nanyang Technological University 39 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences Lim, Jodyn Zhen Ting San, Pei Ling Ting, Hazel Huong Rui Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
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This paper examines the effect of strength of family ties on the level of financial development across 80 countries using OLS and IV-2SLS frameworks. We amalgamate two emerging strands of literature, the sources of financial development and the effect that family ties have on economic behaviour. To mitigate endogeneity bias, we adopt a novel instrument, wheat suitability ratio, to proxy family ties. Our results reveal that the strength of family ties is significantly and negatively correlated with financial development. Our OLS and IV estimates indicate that a one standard deviation increase in strength of family ties leads to a 37.3% and 24.3% decrease in main financial outcome variable, account respectively. |
author2 |
James Ang |
author_facet |
James Ang Lim, Jodyn Zhen Ting San, Pei Ling Ting, Hazel Huong Rui |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Lim, Jodyn Zhen Ting San, Pei Ling Ting, Hazel Huong Rui |
author_sort |
Lim, Jodyn Zhen Ting |
title |
Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
title_short |
Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
title_full |
Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
title_fullStr |
Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
title_sort |
do countries with stronger family ties experience lower level of financial development? |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73856 |
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1681036348500213760 |