Do Development Financing Institutions Spur Economic Growth in Zimbabwe?
Keywords:
Causality, DFIs, Economic growth, OLS, ZimbabweAbstract
The economy of Zimbabwe has primarily been declining since 1998. This is true despite the fact
that the government of Zimbabwe established development financing institutions (DFIs) with the
intention of enabling the major sectors to significantly contribute to the country's economic
growth. Therefore, the study sought an empirical response to the question, "Do DFIs in Zimbabwe
spur economic growth?" To test this link, Granger-causality criteria and Ordinary Least Squares
estimation were used covering the period 1990-2020. Contrary to expectations, the analysis found
that total development funding from the state owned DFIs had a negative impact on economic
growth, while direct foreign remittances, official development assistance, trade openness, bilateral
and multilateral funding all had a positive impact on growth. The Granger causality test results
disproved the existence of a causal link between DFIs and economic growth in Zimbabwe. The
study suggests, among other things, the necessity to increase DFI funding by cultivating an
atmosphere economically favourable that enables both domestic and external DFIs to function at
full potential.