Long-Term Asymmetric Impact of VAT on Domestic Investment in Nigeria
Articles
Nurudeen Abu
Baba-Ahmed University, Nigeria
Blessing Izuagie
Umaru Musa Yar’adua University, Nigeria
Onyewuchi Amaechi Ben-Obi
Central Bank of Nigeria
Published 2023-12-27
https://doi.org/10.15388/omee.2023.14.9
PDF
HTML

Keywords

domestic investment
VAT
non-linear
ARDL
Nigeria

How to Cite

Abu, N., Izuagie, B. and Ben-Obi, O.A. (2023) “Long-Term Asymmetric Impact of VAT on Domestic Investment in Nigeria”, Organizations and Markets in Emerging Economies, 14(3), pp. 644–669. doi:10.15388/omee.2023.14.9.

Abstract

We employ a non-linear ARDL (NARDL) technique to explore long-term asymmetric influence of value added tax (VAT) on domestic investment using quarterly data for Nigeria from 1994 to 2021. A long-term relation was found between domestic investment and VAT (alongside lending and inflation rates, credit to private sector, exchange rate, openness and households’ consumption expenditure) based on the bounds test to cointegration. We uncovered a long-term asymmetric association between domestic investment and VAT. The results show that a positive shock (an increase) in VAT has a long-term decrease and significant influence on domestic investment, while a negative shock (a decrease) in VAT has an insignificant positive influence on investment during the long-term. Other significant long-term drivers of domestic investment are credit to private sector, inflation and lending rates, openness, exchange rate and households’ consumption expenditure. Some recommendations have been offered based on the empirical outcomes.

PDF
HTML
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.