Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://library.cbn.gov.ng:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/143
Title: Government Size and Economic Growth in Nigeria: a test of Wagner's hypothesis
Authors: Dogo, M. Y.
Okpanachi, U. M.
Muhammad, A. A.
Umolu, C. V.
Ajayi, K. J.
Keywords: Wagner's law
Government expenditure
Granger causality
Cointegration
Vector Error Correction Analysis (VECM)
Economic growth
Fully Modified Ordinary Least Square (FMOLS)
Error Correction Model (ECM)
Nigeria
Issue Date: Sep-2013
Publisher: Research Department, Central Bank of Nigeria.
Citation: Dogo, M. Y. et al., (2013). Government Size and Economic Growth in Nigeria: a test of Wagner's Hypothesis. Economic and Financial Review, 51(3), 57–85.
Series/Report no.: Economic and Financial Review;Vol. 51, No. 3
Abstract: This paper attempts an empirical validation of Wagner's law in Nigeria using quarterly data for the period 1982 to 2012. The hypothesis that real income does not Granger-cause government expenditure was rejected. Adopting the Fully Modified Ordinary Least Square (FMOLS) regression techniques, the study found support for the Wagner's hypothesis in Nigeria. The analysis provided empirical evidence to support the existence of a long-run equilibrium relationship between economic activity and government expenditure in Nigeria. Overall, the results corroborated the Goffman's version of the Wagner's law in Nigeria. Thus, government needs to create fiscal space to enable deployment of more resources in growth-enhancing activities, while at the same time putting in place policies aimed at raising revenues concomitantly.
URI: http://library.cbn.gov.ng:8092/jspui/handle/123456789/143
ISSN: 1957-2968
Appears in Collections:Economic and Financial Review



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