4.7 Article

Corruption and stock market development: Developing vs. developed economies

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.irfa.2023.102795

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Stock market development; Corruption; Static panel analysis; Dynamic panel analysis; Developing economies; Developing Developed economies

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This paper examines the impact of corruption on stock market development, highlighting the difference between developing and developed economies and the role of corruption in hindering firms from listing. Using a theoretical model, the study tests for this difference using data from 87 economies over the period 1995-2017. The results show that corruption does not have a significant effect on stock market development for the entire sample, but there is a significant relationship between lower levels of corruption and stock market capitalization as a share of GDP for high-income countries.
This paper looks at the impact of corruption on stock market development, emphasizing the difference between developing and developed economies and the role corruption may play in preventing firms from listing. Guided by a theoretical model that explains why corruption's impact on stock market development may differ, we use a sample of 87 economies worldwide over the period 1995-2017 to test for that difference. For the full sample we find no evidence that corruption has a significant effect on stock market development, but this changes when we split the sample into two groups: high-income and low-income countries. For the subsample of poorer (developing) countries, the corruption-stock market development relationship remains insignificant or weak. For the subsample of high-income (developed) countries, however, we find a significant relationship between lower levels of corruption and stock market capitalization as a share of gross domestic product. Our results further indicate that higher levels of income and investment reduce the impact of that relationship. Our results are robust to alternative estimation specifications and confirm the importance of macroeconomic fundamentals (i.e., income, investment, domestic credit, and macroeconomic stability) for the development of stock markets. In particular, those fundamentals seem more important for developing economies before reduced corruption will have as much (if any) of an impact.

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