Modelling export growth in South Africa with a focus on third-country effects and stock market liquidity.
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Date
2020
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Abstract
After considering the potential benefits of exports in ameliorating lacklustre economic
growth, this thesis analyses South Africa’s exports to the world and to its trading
partners. It notes that gaps in erstwhile studies on export behaviour were attributable
to linear modelling, overlooking the role of the financial economy, and an overreliance
on exchange rate volatility as an explanatory variable, which in part, resulted in the
exchange disconnect puzzle. The gaps are addressed by employing non-linear
models, consideration of financial economic variables, and third-country effects which
collectively addressed the summary objective of establishing the existence of shortrun
and long-run linear and asymmetric relationships of South Africa’s exports with
real and financial economic variables.
A unique exports dataset obtained from the South African Revenue Services (SARS),
is used to undertake multivariate time-series and cross-sectional analysis beginning
with the linear autoregressive distributed lag model (ARDL) and the pooled mean
group (PMG) before progressing to consider non-linearity with the non-linear ARDL
(NARDL), the quantile ARDL (QARDL), the Markov-switching model, the threshold
autoregressive (TAR) model and the panel threshold model. The analysis is conducted
in cognisance with the endogenous growth theory and the finance-led growth
hypothesis which propose an interdependence between the real and financial
economies.
This thesis finds that stock market illiquidity and volatility possess both a linear and
asymmetric negative relationship with exports in the short-run and long-run. Further,
exports were consistently weaker at higher thresholds of the financial economic
variables. Exchange rate relationships and third-country effects are not consistently
significant; confirming the exchange disconnect puzzle. This thesis concludes that
non-linear models and the financial economy must be considered when analysing
South African export demand because they provide a nuanced analysis of export
behaviour. The findings imply that future research in the subject area must consider
the financial economy. In addition, policy makers should incentivise ease of capital
flows to export growth projects because investors react to changing risk and liquidity
costs induced by diminishing exports. This thesis recommends the accommodation of
financial market stability and liquidity within the scope of South Africa’s trade policy to
attain sustained exports contribution towards economic growth.
Description
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg.