STOCK MARKET AND FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN ZIMBABWE

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Kunofiwa Tsaurai ORCID logo

https://doi.org/10.22495/rgcv4i2art4

Abstract

This study investigates the causality relationship between stock market and foreign direct investment. The subject has been contentious in recent years with three theoretical rationales emerging. The first being that FDI net inflows boost stock market by increasing the amount of funds into the host country’ economy. The second suggests that FDI inflows forces the host country government to embrace market friendly policies, regulations and controls that end up boosting stock market. The third theoretical rationale mentions that well-developed and functioning stock markets attracts FDI as multinational firms perceive such a market as a friendly environment whose government is more open to the international community. Using the bi-variate causality test framework, this study discovered that there exists a long run relationship between stock market and FDI net inflows in Zimbabwe. However, the direct causality relationship from either stock market to FDI or from FDI to stock market development could not be found. This implies that stock market development and FDI net inflows in Zimbabwe are indirectly related to each other via some factors whose investigation should be a subject of another research.

Keywords: Zimbabwe, Stock Market Development, Foreign Direct Investment, Co-Integration Testing Approach

How to cite this paper: Tsaurai, K. (2014). Stock market and foreign direct investment in Zimbabwe. Risk governance & control: financial markets & institutions, 4(2), 54-60. https://doi.org/10.22495/rgcv4i2art4