Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)

The study examined the effects of monetary and fiscal policies on the real output growth in the small open Nigerian economy. Specifically, it verified the implication of increasing economic openness on the efficacy of monetary and fiscal policy and also established whether fiscal and monetary polici...

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Autor principal: Saibu, Olufemi Muibi
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:inglés
Publicado: 2015
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Acceso en línea:http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3566
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author Saibu, Olufemi Muibi
author_facet Saibu, Olufemi Muibi
author_sort Saibu, Olufemi Muibi
collection DSpace
description The study examined the effects of monetary and fiscal policies on the real output growth in the small open Nigerian economy. Specifically, it verified the implication of increasing economic openness on the efficacy of monetary and fiscal policy and also established whether fiscal and monetary policies had symmetrical effects on real output in Nigeria. This was with a view to establishing the validity of macroeconomic policy ineffectiveness proposition of new classical school in Nigeria. The study used annual secondary time series data from 1960 to 2003 on Nigeria, collected from International Financial Statistics (IFS) Yearbook published by International Monetary Fund (IMF), 1990 and 2003 editions. A modified Generalized Autoregressive Consistent Heteroskedastic (GARCH) model and Vector Error Correction Mechanism (VECM) technique were used to generate the anticipated and unanticipated series used for estimating an open economy version of the new classical macroeconomic model. Two measures of fiscal and monetary shocks were combined with openness and real oil price shocks in a VECM model to assess the effects of anticipated and unanticipated policy shocks on the output equations and to draw policy inferences The empirical results showed that anticipated and unanticipated fiscal and monetary shocks had no significant positive effects on real output. Furthermore, the degree of openness and oil price shocks {with coefficients -0.434 (t-value -2.08,p< 0.05) and -0.684 (t-value -2.11,p<0.05)} had negative implication on the efficacy of macroeconomic policy in Nigeria. Thus, a 10% increase in fiscal and monetary policies in the presence of increasing economic openness and oil price shocks would cause more than 4.34% and 6.84% reduction in real output respectively. In addition, the results showed that both expansionary and contractionary policy shocks had adverse negative effects on real output growth. Specifically, while expansionary policy shocks had negative {–1.50(t-value -3.76, p<0.05)} as against the expected positive effects, the contractionary policy shocks had no significant negative {0.01 (t-value -0.03,p>0.05)} effects on real output in Nigeria. Similarly, the impulse responses and variance decomposition analysis also established that monetary and fiscal policies played little causal role in explaining real output fluctuations in Nigeria. The conclusion that emerged from the results was that the open macroeconomic version of policy ineffectiveness proposition was valid with respect to fiscal and monetary policy shocks in Nigeria. This is in consonance with earlier works in this area on other countries. Similarly, the result was in agreement with the Dutch Disease Syndrome and also confirmed that policy asymmetry was a Nigerian phenomenon.
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spelling oai:ir.oauife.edu.ng:123456789-35662023-05-13T11:13:25Z Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003) Saibu, Olufemi Muibi Monetary policies Fiscal policies Macroeconomic policy Nigerian economy The study examined the effects of monetary and fiscal policies on the real output growth in the small open Nigerian economy. Specifically, it verified the implication of increasing economic openness on the efficacy of monetary and fiscal policy and also established whether fiscal and monetary policies had symmetrical effects on real output in Nigeria. This was with a view to establishing the validity of macroeconomic policy ineffectiveness proposition of new classical school in Nigeria. The study used annual secondary time series data from 1960 to 2003 on Nigeria, collected from International Financial Statistics (IFS) Yearbook published by International Monetary Fund (IMF), 1990 and 2003 editions. A modified Generalized Autoregressive Consistent Heteroskedastic (GARCH) model and Vector Error Correction Mechanism (VECM) technique were used to generate the anticipated and unanticipated series used for estimating an open economy version of the new classical macroeconomic model. Two measures of fiscal and monetary shocks were combined with openness and real oil price shocks in a VECM model to assess the effects of anticipated and unanticipated policy shocks on the output equations and to draw policy inferences The empirical results showed that anticipated and unanticipated fiscal and monetary shocks had no significant positive effects on real output. Furthermore, the degree of openness and oil price shocks {with coefficients -0.434 (t-value -2.08,p< 0.05) and -0.684 (t-value -2.11,p<0.05)} had negative implication on the efficacy of macroeconomic policy in Nigeria. Thus, a 10% increase in fiscal and monetary policies in the presence of increasing economic openness and oil price shocks would cause more than 4.34% and 6.84% reduction in real output respectively. In addition, the results showed that both expansionary and contractionary policy shocks had adverse negative effects on real output growth. Specifically, while expansionary policy shocks had negative {–1.50(t-value -3.76, p<0.05)} as against the expected positive effects, the contractionary policy shocks had no significant negative {0.01 (t-value -0.03,p>0.05)} effects on real output in Nigeria. Similarly, the impulse responses and variance decomposition analysis also established that monetary and fiscal policies played little causal role in explaining real output fluctuations in Nigeria. The conclusion that emerged from the results was that the open macroeconomic version of policy ineffectiveness proposition was valid with respect to fiscal and monetary policy shocks in Nigeria. This is in consonance with earlier works in this area on other countries. Similarly, the result was in agreement with the Dutch Disease Syndrome and also confirmed that policy asymmetry was a Nigerian phenomenon. 2015-05-19T12:17:55Z 2018-10-29T11:39:11Z 2015-05-19T12:17:55Z 2018-10-29T11:39:11Z 2015-05-19 Thesis http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3566 en PDF application/pdf Nigeria
spellingShingle Monetary policies
Fiscal policies
Macroeconomic policy
Nigerian economy
Saibu, Olufemi Muibi
Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)
title Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)
title_full Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)
title_fullStr Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)
title_full_unstemmed Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)
title_short Openness and the Effects of Fiscal and Monetary Policies on Real Output in Nigeria (1960-2003)
title_sort openness and the effects of fiscal and monetary policies on real output in nigeria 1960 2003
topic Monetary policies
Fiscal policies
Macroeconomic policy
Nigerian economy
url http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3566
work_keys_str_mv AT saibuolufemimuibi opennessandtheeffectsoffiscalandmonetarypoliciesonrealoutputinnigeria19602003