Authors :
Olugbenga Francis Akomolehin
Volume/Issue :
Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 6 - June
Google Scholar :
https://tinyurl.com/cr2x55tj
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25jun066
Note : A published paper may take 4-5 working days from the publication date to appear in PlumX Metrics, Semantic Scholar, and ResearchGate.
Abstract :
This study therefore examined the effect of government expenditure on infrastructural development and its
influence on economic growth in Nigeria from 1999-2022. Using secondary data obtained from the Central Bank of Nigeria,
World Development Indicators, and African Infrastructure Development reports, the paper adopts the Autoregressive
Distributed Lag (ARDL) model to investigate short-, mid-, and long-run relationship between public expenditure and gross
domestic product (GDP). Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) test results support that the variables are integrated at mixed
order of integration, and it validates the use of ARDL framework. The results of the bounds test suggest a strong mutual
long-run equilibrium linkage between government spending on infrastructure and economic growth. The empirical findings
show that only capital spending is statistically significant and positive for GDP in the short-run but that both health and
education recurrent spending are generally either insignificant or negative for growth. The significance and the correct sign
of the error correction term is indicating partial speed of adjustment towards long-run equilibrium with 1.5% per annum.
Post-estimation diagnostic tests support robustness of the model as no problem in serial correlation, heteroscedasticity and
residual normality is indicated. The study concludes that capital spending boosts short-run growth but inefficiency in
recurrent outlays restricts its developmental outcomes. Based on the findings, policy recommendations included enhancing
the effectiveness and FDI-sectoral composition of government expenditures, mainly through the health and education
sector, to promote inclusive and sustainable economic growth. The paper then makes suggestions for further research into
disaggregated expenditure analysis and governance and public finance outcomes.
Keywords :
Government Expenditure, Infrastructure Development, Economic Growth, ARDL Model, Nigeria, Public Finance.
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This study therefore examined the effect of government expenditure on infrastructural development and its
influence on economic growth in Nigeria from 1999-2022. Using secondary data obtained from the Central Bank of Nigeria,
World Development Indicators, and African Infrastructure Development reports, the paper adopts the Autoregressive
Distributed Lag (ARDL) model to investigate short-, mid-, and long-run relationship between public expenditure and gross
domestic product (GDP). Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) test results support that the variables are integrated at mixed
order of integration, and it validates the use of ARDL framework. The results of the bounds test suggest a strong mutual
long-run equilibrium linkage between government spending on infrastructure and economic growth. The empirical findings
show that only capital spending is statistically significant and positive for GDP in the short-run but that both health and
education recurrent spending are generally either insignificant or negative for growth. The significance and the correct sign
of the error correction term is indicating partial speed of adjustment towards long-run equilibrium with 1.5% per annum.
Post-estimation diagnostic tests support robustness of the model as no problem in serial correlation, heteroscedasticity and
residual normality is indicated. The study concludes that capital spending boosts short-run growth but inefficiency in
recurrent outlays restricts its developmental outcomes. Based on the findings, policy recommendations included enhancing
the effectiveness and FDI-sectoral composition of government expenditures, mainly through the health and education
sector, to promote inclusive and sustainable economic growth. The paper then makes suggestions for further research into
disaggregated expenditure analysis and governance and public finance outcomes.
Keywords :
Government Expenditure, Infrastructure Development, Economic Growth, ARDL Model, Nigeria, Public Finance.