Toward achieving sustainable development agenda: Nexus between agriculture, trade openness, and oil rents in Nigeria
Authors: Adedoyin, F.F., Osundina, O.A., Bekun, F.V. and Asongu, S.A.
Journal: Open Agriculture
Volume: 7
Issue: 1
Pages: 420-432
eISSN: 2391-9531
DOI: 10.1515/opag-2022-0111
Abstract:Over the years, agriculture has been considered as a panacea for long-term economic growth as believed by the physiocracy school of thought. Aligning this with the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (specifically UN-SDG-2 which highlights zero hunger), the present study empirically complements existing studies by exploring the interactions between agriculture, trade openness, and oil rents using annual time frequency series data from 1981-2017. A series of analyses is conducted. First, a battery of non-stationarity and stationarity unit root tests are performed; these range from the traditional Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) and Phillips-Perron (PP) techniques to the relatively recent Zivot Andrews (ZA) unit root test which accounts for a single structural break to ascertain stationarity properties in the variables under review. Subsequently, the recent Bayer-Hanck cointegration test in conjunction with the Johansen cointegration test was used for the cointegration analysis. Furthermore, to detect the direction of causality, the Toda-Yamamoto Granger Causality test alongside the impulse response function technique shows insightful outcomes. From the empirical results, cointegration is apparent and a long-run equilibrium relationship is traced between the outlined variables over the investigated period. The causality results and impulse response analysis highlight the existence of one-way causality links running from agriculture to trade and from trade to oil rents. The causality test results are informative, and the plausible explanation might be due to the dwindling oil market prices. More insights are elucidated in the conclusion section accordingly.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/37112/
Source: Scopus
Toward achieving sustainable development agenda: Nexus between agriculture, trade openness, and oil rents in Nigeria
Authors: Adedoyin, F.F., Osundina, O.A., Bekun, F.V. and Asongu, S.A.
Journal: OPEN AGRICULTURE
Volume: 7
Issue: 1
Pages: 420-432
ISSN: 2391-9531
DOI: 10.1515/opag-2022-0111
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/37112/
Source: Web of Science (Lite)
Toward achieving sustainable development agenda: Nexus between agriculture, trade openness, and oil rents in Nigeria
Authors: Adedoyin, F.F., Osundina, O.A., Bekun, F.V. and Asongu, S.A.
Journal: Open Agriculture
Volume: 7
Issue: 1
Pages: 420-432
ISSN: 2391-9531
Abstract:Over the years, agriculture has been considered as a panacea for long-term economic growth as believed by the physiocracy school of thought. Aligning this with the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (specifically UN-SDG-2 which highlights zero hunger), the present study empirically complements existing studies by exploring the interactions between agriculture, trade openness, and oil rents using annual time frequency series data from 1981-2017. A series of analyses is conducted. First, a battery of non-stationarity and stationarity unit root tests are performed; these range from the traditional Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) and Phillips-Perron (PP) techniques to the relatively recent Zivot Andrews (ZA) unit root test which accounts for a single structural break to ascertain stationarity properties in the variables under review. Subsequently, the recent Bayer-Hanck cointegration test in conjunction with the Johansen cointegration test was used for the cointegration analysis. Furthermore, to detect the direction of causality, the Toda-Yamamoto Granger Causality test alongside the impulse response function technique shows insightful outcomes. From the empirical results, cointegration is apparent and a long-run equilibrium relationship is traced between the outlined variables over the investigated period. The causality results and impulse response analysis highlight the existence of one-way causality links running from agriculture to trade and from trade to oil rents. The causality test results are informative, and the plausible explanation might be due to the dwindling oil market prices. More insights are elucidated in the conclusion section accordingly.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/37112/
Source: BURO EPrints