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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Towards an Islamic financial system : a case study of the IDB

Harery, Khadija Saleh January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
2

Analysing the Relationship between Banking Development and Economic Growth: Time Series Evidence from Namibia

Diergaardt, Colin 06 August 2021 (has links)
The main objective of this study is to examine the relationship between banking development and economic growth in Namibia. Namibia has eight licenced commercial banks, four of which have been operational prior to the country's independence; Bank Windhoek Limited, First National Bank Namibia Limited, Nedbank Namibia Limited and Standard Bank Namibia Limited (BON, 2018). The other four licenced commercial banks began operating post independence. The banking development indicators employed by this study were broad money to nominal GDP (M2), private sector credit to nominal GDP (PSC), and lending interest rates (INTR). The data used in this study is annual data, covering the period 1991 to 2018, engaging the VAR/VECM framework in order to determine the presence of a long-run and short-run association. In addition, this study engaged the Granger causality methodology in order to determine the casual association between banking development and economic growth. The error correction term equation suggested a long-run relationship between the variables in the VECM, while the results indicated that there are no short run associations amongst the variables. Further, the results of the Granger causality test indicated a bidirectional causality between LNRGDP and LNPSC. In addition, the causality test showed that lags of LNINTR Granger causes LNPSC, which is consistent with the neoclassical theory of interest rate, which pronounces that interest rates are determined by the demand and the supply of loanable funds. Moreover, lags of LNINTR and lags of LNM2 granger causes LNRGDP, which suggest that banking development causes economic growth. The study recommended that the Namibian banks should reform credit policies and decrease the cost of debt in an attempt to avail more credit to the private sector in order to sustain and stimulate economic growth.
3

Regional financial disparity in India: can it be measured?

Arora, Rashmi, Anand, Prathivadi B. 02 April 2021 (has links)
Yes / In this study we examine disparities in financial development at the regional level in India. The major research questions of the study are: How do we measure the level of financial development at the sub-national level? How unequal is financial development across the states? Does it vary by ownership of financial institutions? To explore these research questions, our study develops composite banking development index at the sub-national level for three different bank groups - public, private and foreign for 25 Indian states covering 1996 - 2015. Our findings suggest that despite reforms, banking development is significantly higher in the leading high income and more developed regions compared to lagging ones. Further, we find that all bank groups including public banks are concentrated more in the developed regions. Overall, over the years the position of top three and bottom three states in the aggregate banking index has remained unchanged reflecting lop-sidedness of regional development. We also note improvement in the ranking of some north-eastern states during the period 2009-15.
4

Environnement institutionnel, stabilité bancaire et croissance économique dans les pays du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord / Institutional Environment, Bank Stability and Economic Growth in the Middle East and North Africa

Youssef, Darin 25 June 2015 (has links)
La région du Moyen-Orient et d’Afrique du Nord (MENA) a été le théâtre de réformes institutionnelles et financières ayant pour objectif de promouvoir le développement économique. Alors que les théories traditionnelles se concentrent sur l’accumulation du capital et le progrès technique comme facteurs explicatifs fondamentaux de la croissance économique, les travaux donnant naissance à la « nouvelle économie institutionnelle » ont mis en relief la contribution majeure du développement institutionnel à la croissance économique. L’objectif de cette thèse est de comprendre le rôle de la qualité institutionnelle et de la régulation bancaire dans l’explication du développement financier et de la croissance économique des pays de la région MENA depuis les années 1980. A partir de modélisations économétriques appropriées, la thèse cherche à répondre aux trois grandes questions suivantes : quel rôle jouent la qualité institutionnelle et la régulation bancaire dans l’explication des variations des fonds propres, du risque et de l’efficacité bancaire dans le système bancaire de la région MENA ? Y a-t-il un effet significatif du développement institutionnel sur les développements bancaire et économique ? Dans quelle mesure les différences transnationales en termes de performance économique peuvent-elles être expliquées par des facteurs institutionnels ? Les principaux résultats de la thèse sont que : (i) la qualité institutionnelle a un effet significatif sur les fonds propres, la prise de risque et l’efficacité des banques opérant dans la région du Moyen-Orient et d’Afrique du Nord ; (ii) la régulation bancaire a un effet positif et significatif sur le développement bancaire, et il existe une interdépendance positive et significative entre développement économique et développement bancaire ; (iii) l’effet de la qualité institutionnelle sur les pays qui affichent une faible croissance économique en moyenne est plus fort que l’effet sur les pays à forte croissance économique. / The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has witnessed many institutional and financial reforms meant to stimulate economic development. While traditional theories of economic growth promote capital accumulation and technological progress as fundamental determinants of economic development, studies that gave birth to the “new institutional economics” stress the major contribution of institutional development to economic development. The objective of this dissertation is to understand the role of institutional quality and financial regulation in the process of financial development and economic growth in the MENA region since the 1980s. Based on recent and adequate econometric models, this dissertation answers the following questions: What is the role played by institutional quality and banking regulation in explaining capital, risk and efficiency adjustments in the banking system of the MENA region? Is there a positive and significant effect of institutional quality on banking and economic development? Can inter-country differences in terms of economic performance be explained by institutional factors? significant effect on bank capital, excessive risk taking and efficiency of banks operating in the MENA region; (ii) Banking regulation has a positive and significant effect on banking development, and there is positive and significant interdependence between economic growth and banking development; (iii) the impact of institutional quality is stronger in countries that witnessed a weak growth rate on average compared to fast-growing countries where the institutional effect is not significant.
5

Banks, stock market and economic growth in Botswana: a time series analysis

Malebye, Nthabiseng 27 October 2022 (has links) (PDF)
This study examines the relationship between banks, stock market and economic development in Botswana using quarterly data from 1995 to 2016. To find out if there is a link between financial development and economic growth, the three measures of stock market development used are stock market capitalization, total value of shares traded and turnover. For bank-based financial development, the proxy is bank credit to private sector and the measure of economic growth is real gross domestic product (GDP) per capita. To analyse the long run and short run relationships among the variables of interest, this study implements the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) cointegration technique and the Granger causality technique to find the direction of causality. The findings indicate that there is a positive short and long run relationship between stock market variables and economic growth when turnover and market capitalization are used as proxies and value traded is significant and negatively related to economic growth. The study found that bank credit to private sector is negatively related to economic growth both in the short and the long run. There is bidirectional causality between stock market financial development and economic growth and no causal relationship between banking financial development and economic growth in Botswana. This study recommends that there should be appropriate reforms to develop the financial sector in Botswana to help promote economic growth. Botswana should also have reforms to promote economic growth to foster stock market financial development. This study also offers a comprehensive and detailed overview of the state of the economy, banking system and the financial markets system of Botswana which can help foreign investors as well as individual and institutional investors in making sound investment decisions.

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