scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

Contractual savings or stock market development - Which leads?

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors study the relationship between the development of contractual savings (assets of pension funds, and life insurance companies) and non-life insurance, and the developing of stock markets (market capitalization and value traded).
Abstract
The authors study the relationship between the development of contractual savings (assets of pension funds, and life insurance companies) and non-life insurance, and, the development of stock markets (market capitalization and value traded). Their contribution lies in providing time-series evidence on a hypothesis that is very popular - but had not been substantiated - among supporters of fully funded pension systems in which funds invest large shares of their portfolios in tradable securities (equities, bonds). The literature is not clear on its assumption regarding causality between contractual savings, and capital market development. A one-way or two-way relationship is assumed, usually inter-changeably; the authors address the questions of which leads empirically. They present the evidence, including descriptive statistics, and the results of Granger causality tests, for OECD countries, and such countries as Chile, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, and Thailand. They do not present a theoretical framework, but do explain how the growth of the contractual savings sector, is thought to promote financial development. The authors find evidence in the data that causality between institutions, and markets either does not exist, or, if it exists, runs predominantly from institutions to markets. To a lesser extent, there is simultaneous causality between institutions, and markets. Furthermore, there is limited evidence that causality runsonly from markets to institutions (the only exception seems to be for non-life insurance in developing countries). Results seem to support the idea that the development of institutional investors, is likely to promote the growth of market capitalization, more than that of value traded. In developing countries, there seems to be no causality from pension funds to growth in value traded, while there is causality from life, and non-life insurance.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic, demographic, and institutional determinants of life insurance consumption across countries

TL;DR: This article found that economic indicators such as inflation, income per capita, and banking sector development and religious and institutional indicators are the most robust predictors of the use of life insurance, while education, life expectancy, the young dependency ratio and the size of the social security system appear to have no robust association with life insurance consumption.
BookDOI

Finance for Growth: Policy Choices in a Volatile World

TL;DR: The overall impact of financial globalization on the domestic financial sector is profound as mentioned in this paper, and the consequences have not been uniformly favorable, as domestic interest rates in developing countries have moved to a premium over industrial country rates, and can surge at times of currency speculation.
Book

Local Financial Development and Growth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the relationship between banking sector development, human capital, and economic growth at the sub-national level using a unique sample of net domestic product data for districts in India.
BookDOI

The impact of contractual savings institutions on securities markets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess empirically the impact of contractual savings institutions portfolios (pension funds and life insurance companies) on securities markets, for example, depth and liquidity in domestic stock market, and depth in the domestic bond market.
Dissertation

The Determinants of Stock Market Development: The Case for the Nairobi Stock Exchange

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the determinants of development in the Nairobi Stock Exchange and reported no relationship between stock market development and macroeconomic stability -inflation and private capital flows.
Related Papers (5)