THE DETERMINANTS OF DOMESTIC INVESTMENT IN NIGERIA: A NEW EVIDENCE FROM NON-LINEAR AUTOREGRESSIVE DISTRIBUTED LAG (NARDL) MODEL
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Date
2020
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Publisher
Economics and Management
Abstract
This study employs an extended Nonlinear ARDL cointegration approach to examine the
determinants of domestic investment in Nigeria over the 1980-2018 period. The result from bound
testing reveal the presence of cointegrating relationship between domestic investment and the
included variables. The empirical evidence demonstrates that domestic investment in Nigeria is
determined by inflation, real interest and exchange rate, government spending, electric power
consumption, savings, per capita income, credit to private sector and the interaction between
government spending and oil price in the short-run; and inflation, interest and exchange rate,
government spending, internal conflict, savings, and interaction between oil price and government
spending in the long-run. The results also suggest that the impact of increase in interest, inflation
and exchange rate is statistically different from their decrease. In essence, this study recommends
the increase in government capital expenditure, savings, diversification of the economy, reduction
of lending interest rate, maintenance of investment-friendly inflation rate, and conflicts control.
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Keywords
Investment, Interest rate, inflation, exchange rate, government, internal conflict, Nigeria, NARDL