Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation

Objective: The main aim of this paper is to empirically investigate whether money supply is the sole determinant of inflation in Nigeria as maintained by monetarist theory that “inflation everywhere is monetary phenomenon”.Methodology: A time series data for a period of 46 years was used.Unit root w...

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Main Authors: Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid, Hidthiir, Mohammad Helmi, Hassan, Sallahuddin
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/24827/1/2nd%20IRC%202017%2064.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/24827/
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spelling my.uum.repo.248272018-09-26T01:54:55Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/24827/ Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid Hidthiir, Mohammad Helmi Hassan, Sallahuddin HC Economic History and Conditions Objective: The main aim of this paper is to empirically investigate whether money supply is the sole determinant of inflation in Nigeria as maintained by monetarist theory that “inflation everywhere is monetary phenomenon”.Methodology: A time series data for a period of 46 years was used.Unit root was conducted and the results showed that variables are mixed, they are not integrated in the same order, and this necessitated the use of Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model (ARDL) as the tool for econometric analysis. Results: Even though, money supply increment is inflationary, the results show that other factors influence inflation in the country. This justifies the myth of monetarist theory of inflation for agitating money supply increment to be the sole source of inflation. Research Limitation: The findings of this research are limited to the country whose data were used (Nigeria), based on the econometrics techniques applied (ARDL) and the time period utilized (annual data from 1970 – 2015).Implication: An explanation of a theory regarding inflation in Nigeria and the rest of the developing nations should not be taken for granted. Generalizations need not to be done without been empirically tested. Originality/Value: The paper was able to empirically prove the myth of monetarist theory of inflation in Nigeria and also suggest for other theories to be empirically tested for the purpose of checking whether their arguments explain the dynamics of inflation of the country. 2017-07-11 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/24827/1/2nd%20IRC%202017%2064.pdf Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid and Hidthiir, Mohammad Helmi and Hassan, Sallahuddin (2017) Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation. In: 2nd International Research Conference on Economics Business and Social Sciences, 11-12 July 2017, Park Royal Hotel Penang Malaysia..
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic HC Economic History and Conditions
spellingShingle HC Economic History and Conditions
Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid
Hidthiir, Mohammad Helmi
Hassan, Sallahuddin
Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation
description Objective: The main aim of this paper is to empirically investigate whether money supply is the sole determinant of inflation in Nigeria as maintained by monetarist theory that “inflation everywhere is monetary phenomenon”.Methodology: A time series data for a period of 46 years was used.Unit root was conducted and the results showed that variables are mixed, they are not integrated in the same order, and this necessitated the use of Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model (ARDL) as the tool for econometric analysis. Results: Even though, money supply increment is inflationary, the results show that other factors influence inflation in the country. This justifies the myth of monetarist theory of inflation for agitating money supply increment to be the sole source of inflation. Research Limitation: The findings of this research are limited to the country whose data were used (Nigeria), based on the econometrics techniques applied (ARDL) and the time period utilized (annual data from 1970 – 2015).Implication: An explanation of a theory regarding inflation in Nigeria and the rest of the developing nations should not be taken for granted. Generalizations need not to be done without been empirically tested. Originality/Value: The paper was able to empirically prove the myth of monetarist theory of inflation in Nigeria and also suggest for other theories to be empirically tested for the purpose of checking whether their arguments explain the dynamics of inflation of the country.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid
Hidthiir, Mohammad Helmi
Hassan, Sallahuddin
author_facet Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid
Hidthiir, Mohammad Helmi
Hassan, Sallahuddin
author_sort Danlami, Ibrahim Abdulhamid
title Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation
title_short Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation
title_full Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation
title_fullStr Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation
title_full_unstemmed Money Supply and Inflation in Nigeria: The Myth of Monetarist Theory of Inflation
title_sort money supply and inflation in nigeria: the myth of monetarist theory of inflation
publishDate 2017
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/24827/1/2nd%20IRC%202017%2064.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/24827/
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score 13.160551