Dear Members of the Economics Division,
It is my pleasure to announce Damilola Fasina’s first annual review. Damilola is jointly
supervised by Theo and Maria. The review presentation is due to take place on 19/03/20 at
13:00.
A reminder to all members of the economics division that this review has salience as it
will assess the level of work that Damilola has undertaken in the past year and will seek
to establish if Damilola should be registered as a PhD Student.
May I request that all members of the division try to attend? This is an important
division-wide event. I would also remind all of our PhD students that they too should be
attending to support one of their colleagues.
The Damilola’s talk will be on Exchange rate volatility, foreign direct investment, and
financial development in the Economic Community of West African States.
The abstract for the talk is below.
Best wishes,
Hector
——
Abstract
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) is an economic union comprising
fifteen countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Cote d’ Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea
Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Senegal, and Togo. It was established
to foster economic integration in all fields of economic activity among the member states
and promote economic development. ECOWAS is considered as one of the more effective
economic blocs in Africa evident in its continuous efforts towards harmonising
macroeconomic policies and promotion of economic integration across Africa. Most countries
in ECOWAS depend heavily on natural resource commodities which serve as the major source
of foreign exchange earnings. As a result, these countries, and thus subsequently the
union itself, are heavily exposed to the effects of foreign exchange volatility given that
international commodity prices are inherently volatile and heavily affected by financial
or economic crises that may arise elsewhere yet lead to dramatic falls in the aggregate
demand for African commodities.
Since the beginning of the century, multinational enterprises from both developed and
emerging economies have been significantly expanding their activities in ECOWAS not only
due to the availability of natural resources but also due to expanding investment
opportunities in other sectors such as transportation, energy, telecommunications, and
banking. As a result, foreign direct investment (FDI) has come to be contributing
significantly to the economic growth and development of ECOWAS through transfers of
knowhow and technology, creation of jobs and supply chains, as well as advancements in
skilled labour and human capital.
The extant economic literature has put forward several competing theoretical arguments to
explain the relationship between exchange rate volatility and FDI. However, the intuition
behind these theories seems to be based exclusively upon the macroeconomic experience of
western countries during the 1980s and 1990s; with respect to developing countries (and
especially ECOWAS), the extant literature includes only empirical studies whose
observations are given without any theoretical or intuitive justification. This study aims
to examine the effect of exchange-rate volatility on FDI and how this relationship is in
turn affected by financial development across ECOWAS. Our analysis will be based upon an
empirical investigation, using panel-data cointegration techniques, to identify both
common as well as individual factors across the countries in ECOWAS. More specifically, we
will deploy sectoral FDI data to analyse the within- but also across-country relationship
between exchange-rate volatility and FDI. This will allow us to test competing theoretical
explanations in the literature for the effect of exchange-rate volatility on FDI and
identify the ones that are relevant for key sectors of economic activity in the ECOWAS.
Moreover, the interaction of sectoral FDI data with country-specific measures of financial
development will allow us to describe how the underlying economic mechanisms evolve over
time. Either of these dimensions of our analysis will make a novel contribution to the
extant literature on the relationship between exchange rates and FDI, especially with
respect to ECOWAS.
________________________________________________________________________________
Microsoft Teams meeting
Join on your computer or mobile app
Click here to join the
meeting<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NjZiZGY1Z…
Or call in (audio only)
+44 131 460 4091,,789318099#<tel:+441314604091,,789318099#> United Kingdom,
Edinburgh
Phone Conference ID: 789 318 099#
Find a local
number<https://dialin.teams.microsoft.com/1527ff80-ccf9-40fa-b6de-02ba24…
| Reset
PIN<https://mysettings.lync.com/pstnconferencing>
Learn more<https://aka.ms/JoinTeamsMeeting> | Meeting
options<https://teams.microsoft.com/meetingOptions/?organizerId=0228eca0…
________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________
The University achieved an overall 5 stars in the QS World University Rankings 2020
UK Sports University of the Year 2020 (Times Higher Good University Guide)
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159.