An Empirical Investigation on Determinants of Sustainable Economic Growth. Lessons from Central and Eastern European Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Brief Taxonomy Regarding the Impact of Financial Direct Investments on Economic Growth
2.2. Brief Overview Regarding the Impact of the Banking Sector on Economic Development
2.3. Brief Overview Regarding the Impact of International Trade, Human Capital, Shadow Economy and Other Factors on Economic Growth
2.4. Brief Overview Regarding the Impact of Energy and Technology Transfer on Economic Growth
3. Method and Results
3.1. Analysis of Central Tendency and Variation
3.2. Econometric Models
- a0 represents the intercept;
- ai represents the coefficient parameter, taking values from 1 to 4;
- X represents the independent variable;
- i refers to the country’s activity, taking values from 1 to 10;
- t refers to the analyzed time frame (2005–2016), taking values from 1 to 12;
- represents the fixed effects intended to control for time-invariant country-specific factors;
- represents the fixed effects that control for common shocks (for instance, the global financial crisis);
- is the error term.
3.3. Discussion
3.4. Unit Root and Stationarity, Panel Fully Modified Least Squares (FMOLS) and Dynamic Ordinary Least Squares Methods (DOLS)
3.4.1. Unit Root and Stationarity
3.4.2. Pooled OLS, Fixed Effect, Random Effect, and Hausman Test
3.4.3. Panel Fully Modified Least Squares (FMOLS)
3.4.4. VECM and VAR Analyses
VECM
Wald Test
3.5. Johansen Cointegration Test
3.6. Discussion
4. Conclusions and Policy Implications
- (a)
- Transition to free trade and market economy;
- (b)
- Habit of controlling expenditures, inherited from the previously controlled economy;
- (c)
- Uncertainty of the free market and European Union.
- FDI was neither a blessing nor a curse for national economies;
- The economic crisis did not attract FDI;
- An economy with a sound currency would attract FDI;
- Without incentives such as those given by authorities from Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania, FDI would not enter national economies.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
GDP | gross domestic product |
GDP_P_CAP | gross domestic product per capita income |
GDP_PPP | gross purchasing power parity |
EXPORTS | total exports of goods |
IMPORTS | total imports of goods |
FDI_INF | financial direct investment inflow |
FDI_OUTF | financial direct investment outflow |
GDS | gross domestic savings |
GDC | gross domestic capital |
OECD | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development |
BRICS | Association of five emerging economies: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa |
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1 | The leptokurtic distribution shows a much higher peak around the mean value, and fat tails, or higher densities of values at the extreme ends of the probability curve. The platykurtic distribution shows the exact opposite. |
Variable | GDP | GDP_P_CAP | GDP_PPP | GDS | GDC | EXPORTS | IMPORTS | FDI_INF | FDI_OUTF |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean | 2.595000 | 3.033333 | 3.701131 | 23.49167 | 20.23833 | 33.37000 | 32.98655 | 5.568333 | 2.817500 |
Median | 2.800000 | 3.350000 | 3.514668 | 23.75000 | 21.85000 | 28.95000 | 35.70000 | 3.700000 | 1.350000 |
Maximum | 11.90000 | 12.90000 | 18.56318 | 34.50000 | 41.40000 | 90.20000 | 81.40000 | 54.60000 | 52.70000 |
Minimum | −14.80000 | −14.30000 | −13.05911 | –20.30000 | –32.20000 | –16.40000 | –32.20000 | –28.00000 | –18.90000 |
Std. Dev. | 4.641552 | 4.770380 | 5.156009 | 6.913105 | 11.67648 | 28.04579 | 28.48459 | 9.478689 | 8.189988 |
Skewness | −1.228007 | −1.039220 | −0.154285 | −2.368945 | −2.088830 | 0.427487 | 0.002608 | 2.595301 | 4.530885 |
Kurtosis | 6.178526 | 5.560661 | 4.840111 | 15.50138 | 8.840930 | 2.035468 | 2.060095 | 15.87023 | 27.45001 |
Jarque–Bera | 80.67516 | 54.38449 | 16.82592 | 893.6600 | 257.8465 | 8.306515 | 4.380430 | 962.9255 | 3399.593 |
Probability | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000222 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.015713 | 0.111893 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 |
Observations | 120 | 120 | 116 | 120 | 120 | 120 | 119 | 120 | 120 |
Model 1: | Model 2: | Model 3: | Model 4: | Model 5: | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Constant | −5.037878 ** (−2.040909) | −4.610732 ** (−2.163483) | −4.705574 (−1.401286) | 21.28604 *** (29.55628) | 18.24710 *** (29.168833) |
0.245422 *** (7.083616) | 0.254232 *** (0.643967) | 0.249404 *** (2.646696) | −0.072846 *** (−3.166139 | 0.496179 *** (6.271028) | |
−0.043674 (−1.011192) | −0.053029 (−1.528984) | −0.018633 (−0.295489) | 0.131381 *** (6.537375) | −0.451929 *** (−6.556460) | |
0.329177 *** (8.189671) | 0.354729 *** (9.250830) | 0.197549 ** (5.027329) | −0.030850 (−0.229545) | 0.153821 *** (2.979367) | |
−0.305146 *** (−6.764424) | −0.343824 *** (−7.508574) | −0.180761 ** (−4.824277) | 0.032291 (0.255098) | −0.137367 ** (−2.491484) | |
Prob. > F | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 |
Cross-section effects | Fixed | Fixed | Fixed | None | Fixed |
R2 | 0.573761 | 0.514328 | 0.415360 | 0.266779 | 0.763116 |
Adjusted R-squared | 0.520988 | 0.454197 | 0.340847 | 0.241052 | 0.733787 |
F-statistic | 10.87235 | 8.553470 | 5.574337 | 10.36958 | 26.01955 |
Observations | 119 | 119 | 116 | 119 | 119 |
Panel unit root test: Summary Series: GDP: Sample: 2005–2016: Exogenous variables: Individual effects Automatic selection of maximum lags Automatic lag length selection based on SIC: 0 to 1 Newey–West automatic bandwidth selection and Bartlett kernel | Panel unit root test: Summary Series: D(GDP): Sample: 2005–2016 Exogenous variables: Individual effects Automatic selection of maximum lags Automatic lag length selection based on SIC: 0 to 1 Newey–West automatic bandwidth selection and Bartlett kernel | |||||||
At Level | At Difference | |||||||
Method | Statistic | Prob. ** | Cross-sections | Obs. | Statistic | Prob. ** | Cross-sections | Obs. |
Null: Unit root (assumes common unit root process) | Null: Unit root (assumes common unit root process) | |||||||
Levin, Lin and Chu t * | −7.53233 | 0.0000 | 10 | 107 | c11.4727 | 0.0000 | 10 | 94 |
Null: Unit root (assumes individual unit root process) | Null: Unit root (assumes individual unit root process) | |||||||
Im, Pesaran and Shin W-stat | −3.63088 | 0.0001 | 10 | 107 | −6.28179 | 0.0000 | 10 | 94 |
ADF-Fisher chi-square | 45.3809 | 0.0010 | 10 | 107 | 75.8515 | 0.0000 | 10 | 94 |
PP-Fisher chi-square | 36.4986 | 0.0134 | 10 | 110 | 102.528 | 0.0000 | 10 | 100 |
** Probabilities for Fisher tests are computed using an asymptotic chi-square distribution. All other tests assume asymptotic normality. | ||||||||
Null Hypothesis: Stationarity Series: GDP: Sample: 2005–2016: Exogenous variables: Individual effects Newey–West automatic bandwidth selection and Bartlett kernel Total (balanced) observations: 120: Cross-sections included: 10 | Null Hypothesis: Stationarity Series: D(GDP): Sample: 2005–2016 Exogenous variables: Individual effects Newey–West automatic bandwidth selection and Bartlett kernel Total (balanced) observations: 110 Cross-sections included: 10 | |||||||
At Level | At Difference | |||||||
Method | Statistic | Prob. ** | Statistic | Prob. ** | ||||
Hadri Z-stat | 0.63450 | 0.2629 | 5.23213 | 0.0000 | ||||
Heteroscedastic consistent Z-stat | 1.39141 | 0.0821 | 5.86540 | 0.0000 |
Pooled OLS | Fixed Effect | Random Effect | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dependent Variable: GDP Method: Panel Least Squares Sample: 2005 2016: Periods included: 12 Cross-sections included: 10 Total panel (balanced) observations: 120 | Dependent Variable: GDP Method: Panel Least Squares Sample: 2005 2016: Periods included: 12 Cross-sections included: 10 Total panel (balanced) observations: 120 | Dependent Variable: GDP Method: Panel EGLS (cross-section random effects) Sample: 2005–2016 Periods included: 12 Cross-sections included: 10 Total panel (unbalanced) observations: 117 | ||||||||||
Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-statistic | Prob. | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-statistic | Prob. | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-statistic | Prob. |
C | 1.755956 | 0.587466 | 2.989036 | 0.0034 | −4.367990 | 1.367125 | −3.195019 | 0.0018 | 1.755956 | 0.511377 | 3.433781 | 0.0008 |
EXPORTS | −0.145173 | 0.046726 | −3.106882 | 0.0024 | −0.073646 | 0.051067 | −1.442138 | 0.1522 | −0.145173 | 0.040674 | −3.569162 | 0.0005 |
IMPORTS | 0.143618 | 0.047209 | 3.042188 | 0.0029 | 0.252786 | 0.047424 | 5.330282 | 0.0000 | 0.143618 | 0.041094 | 3.494842 | 0.0007 |
FDI_INF | 0.306682 | 0.081543 | 3.760989 | 0.0003 | 0.351035 | 0.079217 | 4.431308 | 0.0000 | 0.306682 | 0.070981 | 4.320595 | 0.0000 |
FDI_OUTF | −0.288698 | 0.089749 | −3.216736 | 0.0017 | −0.342035 | 0.087281 | −3.918765 | 0.0002 | −0.288698 | 0.078125 | −3.695361 | 0.0003 |
R-squared | 0.279053 | R-squared | 0.496466 | R-squared | 0.279053 | |||||||
Adjusted R-squared | 0.253976 | Adjusted R-squared | 0.434712 | Adjusted R-squared | 0.253976 | |||||||
F-statistic | 11.12810 | F-statistic | 8.039406 | F-statistic | 11.12810 | |||||||
Prob(F-statistic) | 0.000000 | Prob(F-statistic) | 0.000000 | Prob(F-statistic) | 0.000000 | |||||||
Correlated Random Effects—Hausman Test Equation: Untitled test cross-section random effects | ||||||||||||
Test Summary | Chi-Sq. statistic | Chi-Sq. d.f. | Prob. | Cross-section random effects test comparisons | ||||||||
Cross-section random | 40.796545 | 4 | 0.0000 | Variable | Fixed | Random | Var. (Diff.) | Prob. | ||||
Cross-section random effects test comparisons | ||||||||||||
Variable | Fixed | Random | Var. (Diff.) | Prob. | C | −4.367990 | 1.367125 | −3.195019 | 0.0018 | |||
EXPORTS | −0.073646 | −0.145173 | 0.000953 | 0.0205 | EXPORTS | −0.073646 | 0.051067 | −1.442138 | 0.1522 | |||
IMPORTS | 0.252786 | 0.143618 | 0.000560 | 0.0000 | IMPORTS | 0.252786 | 0.047424 | 5.330282 | 0.0000 | |||
FDI_INF | 0.351035 | 0.306682 | 0.001237 | 0.2073 | FDI_INF | 0.351035 | 0.079217 | 4.431308 | 0.0000 | |||
FDI_OUTF | −0.342035 | −0.288698 | 0.001515 | 0.1705 | FDI_OUTF | −0.342035 | 0.087281 | −3.918765 | 0.0002 |
Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-Statistic | Prob. |
---|---|---|---|---|
EXPORTS | −0.090125 | 0.062650 | −1.438549 | 0.1535 |
IMPORTS | 0.226418 | 0.055913 | 4.049459 | 0.0001 |
FDI_INF | 0.327937 | 0.096441 | 3.400383 | 0.0010 |
FDI_OUTF | −0.327248 | 0.105604 | −3.098812 | 0.0025 |
R-squared | 0.481717 | |||
Adjusted R-squared | 0.411533 |
Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-Statistic | Prob. |
---|---|---|---|---|
C (1) | −1.168900 | 0.129244 | −9.044155 | 0.0000 |
C (2) | 0.537198 | 0.131821 | 4.075221 | 0.0001 |
C (3) | 0.070987 | 0.129344 | 0.548823 | 0.5834 |
C (4) | 0.048034 | 0.066502 | 0.722301 | 0.4705 |
R-squared | 0.622065 | |||
Adjusted R-squared | 0.568766 |
Wald Test: System: % | |||
---|---|---|---|
Test Statistic | Value | df | Probability |
Chi-square | 18.17986 | 3 | 0.0004 |
Null hypothesis: C (2) = C (3) = C (4) = 0 |
Unrestricted Cointegration Rank Test (Trace) | Unrestricted Cointegration Rank Test (Maximum Eigenvalue) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hypothesized No. of CE(s) | Eigenvalue | Trace Statistic | 0.05 Critical Value | Prob. ** | Hypothesized No. of CE(s) | Eigenvalue | Max-Eigen Statistic | 0.05 Critical Value | Prob. ** |
None * | 0.557148 | 168.8845 | 69.81889 | 0.0000 | None * | 0.557148 | 73.30672 | 33.87687 | 0.0000 |
At most 1 * | 0.351002 | 95.57780 | 47.85613 | 0.0000 | At most 1 * | 0.351002 | 38.90924 | 27.58434 | 0.0012 |
At most 2 | 0.298090 | 56.66856 | 29.79707 | 0.0000 | At most 2 | 0.298090 | 31.85556 | 21.13162 | 0.0011 |
At most 3 | 0.235800 | 24.81300 | 15.49471 | 0.0015 | At most 3 | 0.235800 | 24.20335 | 14.26460 | 0.0010 |
At most 4 | 0.006751 | 0.609649 | 3.841465 | 0.4349 | At most 4 | 0.006751 | 0.609649 | 3.841465 | 0.4349 |
Trace test indicates 2 cointegrating equations at the 0.05 level. * denotes rejection of the hypothesis at the 0.05 level ** MacKinnon et al. (1999) p-values | Max-eigenvalue test indicates 2 cointegrating equations at the 0.05 level. * denotes rejection of the hypothesis at the 0.05 level ** MacKinnon et al. (1999) p-values |
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Ioan, B.; Mozi, R.M.; Lucian, G.; Gheorghe, F.; Horia, T.; Ioan, B.; Mircea-Iosif, R. An Empirical Investigation on Determinants of Sustainable Economic Growth. Lessons from Central and Eastern European Countries. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2020, 13, 146. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13070146
Ioan B, Mozi RM, Lucian G, Gheorghe F, Horia T, Ioan B, Mircea-Iosif R. An Empirical Investigation on Determinants of Sustainable Economic Growth. Lessons from Central and Eastern European Countries. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2020; 13(7):146. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13070146
Chicago/Turabian StyleIoan, Batrancea, Rathnaswamy Malar Mozi, Gaban Lucian, Fatacean Gheorghe, Tulai Horia, Bircea Ioan, and Rus Mircea-Iosif. 2020. "An Empirical Investigation on Determinants of Sustainable Economic Growth. Lessons from Central and Eastern European Countries" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 13, no. 7: 146. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13070146
APA StyleIoan, B., Mozi, R. M., Lucian, G., Gheorghe, F., Horia, T., Ioan, B., & Mircea-Iosif, R. (2020). An Empirical Investigation on Determinants of Sustainable Economic Growth. Lessons from Central and Eastern European Countries. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 13(7), 146. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13070146