Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries

This study investigated the relationship between domestic credit and net foreign assets in the long run through the monetary approach to the balance of payments (MABP) for a panel of five selected MENA countries (Jordan, Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia) during the period extending from 1980 to 2019...

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Main Authors: Ghilous Azeddine, Ziat Adel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2021-01-01
Series:Economics and Business
Subjects:
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c33
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2021-0009
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spelling doaj-c48a35421b6f49e6a7d12b89d0b206b52021-09-22T06:13:25ZengSciendoEconomics and Business2256-03942021-01-0135113314810.2478/eb-2021-0009Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena CountriesGhilous Azeddine0Ziat Adel1Farhat Abbas University Setif, Setif, AlgeriaFarhat Abbas University Setif, Setif, AlgeriaThis study investigated the relationship between domestic credit and net foreign assets in the long run through the monetary approach to the balance of payments (MABP) for a panel of five selected MENA countries (Jordan, Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia) during the period extending from 1980 to 2019. It employed the second-generation methods in panel data analysis to deal with cross-sectional dependence (CSD) and slope heterogeneity. According to the panel results for Common Correlated Effects Mean Group (CCEMG) and Augmented Mean Group (AMG) estimators, domestic credit has a significant negative impact on net foreign assets in the long run. The country-specific results for the AMG estimator strongly supported the MABP propositions in Jordan, Morocco, and to a lesser extent, in Egypt and Algeria. As for Tunisia, the results do not conform with what MABP predicted. The implicit conclusion is that an increase in domestic credit causes a continuous loss of net foreign assets in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Algeria. Thus, monetary authorities should formulate an appropriate monetary policy to control the domestic credit creation as a mechanism toward improving the balance of payment (BOP) position. Furthermore, the policymakers should concentrate on other policy instruments to correct the BOP deficit rather than focusing on monetary tools, especially in Tunisia, where the findings showed that BOP was not a monetary phenomenon.https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2021-0009balance of paymentsmonetary approachcross-sectional dependenceheterogeneous panelaugmented mean group (amg)c31c33e12e42
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ghilous Azeddine
Ziat Adel
spellingShingle Ghilous Azeddine
Ziat Adel
Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries
Economics and Business
balance of payments
monetary approach
cross-sectional dependence
heterogeneous panel
augmented mean group (amg)
c31
c33
e12
e42
author_facet Ghilous Azeddine
Ziat Adel
author_sort Ghilous Azeddine
title Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries
title_short Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries
title_full Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries
title_fullStr Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries
title_full_unstemmed Domestic Credit and the Balance of Payment Deficit: Evidence from a Heterogeneous Panel of Five Selected Mena Countries
title_sort domestic credit and the balance of payment deficit: evidence from a heterogeneous panel of five selected mena countries
publisher Sciendo
series Economics and Business
issn 2256-0394
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This study investigated the relationship between domestic credit and net foreign assets in the long run through the monetary approach to the balance of payments (MABP) for a panel of five selected MENA countries (Jordan, Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia) during the period extending from 1980 to 2019. It employed the second-generation methods in panel data analysis to deal with cross-sectional dependence (CSD) and slope heterogeneity. According to the panel results for Common Correlated Effects Mean Group (CCEMG) and Augmented Mean Group (AMG) estimators, domestic credit has a significant negative impact on net foreign assets in the long run. The country-specific results for the AMG estimator strongly supported the MABP propositions in Jordan, Morocco, and to a lesser extent, in Egypt and Algeria. As for Tunisia, the results do not conform with what MABP predicted. The implicit conclusion is that an increase in domestic credit causes a continuous loss of net foreign assets in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Algeria. Thus, monetary authorities should formulate an appropriate monetary policy to control the domestic credit creation as a mechanism toward improving the balance of payment (BOP) position. Furthermore, the policymakers should concentrate on other policy instruments to correct the BOP deficit rather than focusing on monetary tools, especially in Tunisia, where the findings showed that BOP was not a monetary phenomenon.
topic balance of payments
monetary approach
cross-sectional dependence
heterogeneous panel
augmented mean group (amg)
c31
c33
e12
e42
url https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2021-0009
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