ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?

Conducting a study on the long-run relationship between money supply and government revenue is crucial for informing monetary-fiscal policy decisions in Nigeria as a developing country. This study analyses the dynamic interaction between money supply (using broad M2) and government revenue, using a...

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Main Authors: C. STANLEY UDEGBULE, ESTHER ESERA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Federal University Wukari 2024-10-01
Series:International Studies Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://wissjournals.com.ng/index.php/wiss/article/view/472
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author C. STANLEY UDEGBULE
ESTHER ESERA
author_facet C. STANLEY UDEGBULE
ESTHER ESERA
author_sort C. STANLEY UDEGBULE
collection DOAJ
description Conducting a study on the long-run relationship between money supply and government revenue is crucial for informing monetary-fiscal policy decisions in Nigeria as a developing country. This study analyses the dynamic interaction between money supply (using broad M2) and government revenue, using an autoregressive distributive lag (ARDL) bounds test approach from 1980 to 2020. Results from the analyses show the existence of a long-run correlation between supply and government revenue, when money supply was made the explanatory variable. Using government revenue as the independent variable, there was no evidence of long-run relationship in the analyses. By implication, change in government revenue in the previous years have significantly affected money supply as an economic indicator in the Nigerian economy. In addition, the estimated coefficient of revenue indicates a positive and significant impact on money supply within the period of this study. Specifically, a one percent (1%) increases in revenue caused an approximately 0.96% increase in money supply at the long-run. The result equally revealed that, the signs of the short-run dynamic impact of the variable are significant. The ECM is estimated as 0.17% and -o.28%, which implies that government revenue and money supply have significant short-run effect on the Nigerian economy, as against some of the findings of the literature reviewed. The study recommends that, since the oil sector seems to be generating more revenue to stimulate productivity and encourage other sectors, policy makers should introduce measures to effectively monitor and regulate oil production to ensure transparency and accountability.
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spelling doaj-art-4b0226154ff94a9baecbaa63dd0f19c32025-01-16T20:02:11ZengFederal University WukariInternational Studies Journal2756-46492024-10-0187ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?C. STANLEY UDEGBULE0ESTHER ESERA1TOPFAITH UNIVERSITY, AKWA IBOM STATETOPFAITH UNIVERSITY, AKWA IBOM STATE Conducting a study on the long-run relationship between money supply and government revenue is crucial for informing monetary-fiscal policy decisions in Nigeria as a developing country. This study analyses the dynamic interaction between money supply (using broad M2) and government revenue, using an autoregressive distributive lag (ARDL) bounds test approach from 1980 to 2020. Results from the analyses show the existence of a long-run correlation between supply and government revenue, when money supply was made the explanatory variable. Using government revenue as the independent variable, there was no evidence of long-run relationship in the analyses. By implication, change in government revenue in the previous years have significantly affected money supply as an economic indicator in the Nigerian economy. In addition, the estimated coefficient of revenue indicates a positive and significant impact on money supply within the period of this study. Specifically, a one percent (1%) increases in revenue caused an approximately 0.96% increase in money supply at the long-run. The result equally revealed that, the signs of the short-run dynamic impact of the variable are significant. The ECM is estimated as 0.17% and -o.28%, which implies that government revenue and money supply have significant short-run effect on the Nigerian economy, as against some of the findings of the literature reviewed. The study recommends that, since the oil sector seems to be generating more revenue to stimulate productivity and encourage other sectors, policy makers should introduce measures to effectively monitor and regulate oil production to ensure transparency and accountability. https://wissjournals.com.ng/index.php/wiss/article/view/472Government RevenueMoney supplyEconomic GrowthFinancial SectorDeveloping CountriesCBN
spellingShingle C. STANLEY UDEGBULE
ESTHER ESERA
ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?
International Studies Journal
Government Revenue
Money supply
Economic Growth
Financial Sector
Developing Countries
CBN
title ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?
title_full ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?
title_fullStr ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?
title_full_unstemmed ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?
title_short ARE MONETARY AUTHORITIES’ ACTIONS (MONEY SUPPLY) FACTORED INTO NIGERIA’S GOVERNMENT REVENUE STREAMS?
title_sort are monetary authorities actions money supply factored into nigeria s government revenue streams
topic Government Revenue
Money supply
Economic Growth
Financial Sector
Developing Countries
CBN
url https://wissjournals.com.ng/index.php/wiss/article/view/472
work_keys_str_mv AT cstanleyudegbule aremonetaryauthoritiesactionsmoneysupplyfactoredintonigeriasgovernmentrevenuestreams
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