An Investigation of the Relationship between Government Spending and Private Consumption in Kenya.
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Date
2017-09-30
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Publisher
SAS Publishers (Scholars Academic and Scientific Publishers)
Abstract
Over the past years, the relationship between government spending and private consumption remains one of the contentious issues in
macroeconomics literature. The question of whether public expenditure is neutral or crowds in or out private consumption has dominated theoretical and
empirical debate. Three major schools of thought on the issue are observed in the literature, these are the Ricardian equivalence theorem, the Keynesian
framework and the Substitutability hypothesis each with a distinct set of explanations. These contrasting schools of thought have triggered several
empirical studies attempting to investigate the relationship between government spending and private consumption. However, conclusions from the empirical
studies are inconclusive. Most of the empirical studies, on the subject have mainly focused on the high-income countries which have different structural
properties in their economic structure and government spending patterns. There is scanty literature on the relationship between private consumption and
government spending in the less developed economies. In Kenya, most of the studies focus on the relationship between government expenditure and economic
growth. The government expenditure in Kenya has been increasing gradually over the years. The average value of government expenditure was 9.96 billion
U.S. dollars with a minimum of 0.56 billion U.S. dollars in 1961 and a maximum of 50.29 billion U.S. dollars in 2015. On the other hand, the private
consumption, average increment was 2.06 billion U.S. dollars with a minimum of 0.09 billion U.S. dollars in 1960 and a maximum of 9.19 billion U.S. dollars
in 2015. Though there is upward trend of both private consumption and public spending in Kenya, the relationship between the variables is not clear. This study
sought to investigate the relationship between government spending and private consumption in Kenya. The specific objectives of this study were to; determine
the correlation between government spending and private consumption, establishthe long run equilibrium linkage between government spending and private
consumption and determine the causality link between government spending and private consumption in Kenya. This study was based on correlational research
design and used the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) estimation technique. The model was subjected to several diagnostic tests, Breusch-
Godfrey serial correlation LM test, CUSUM test and Bound test to ensure validity and reliability. The results of the study revealed that government
spending has a significant positive effect on private consumption both in short run (= 0.376,) and long-run (= 0.888,). The results also indicated that the
variables had a positive trend with a strong, statistically significant positiveassociation (0.998,). The Granger causality test results indicate that there is long
run unidirectional causal relationship running from government consumption to private consumption. Based on the results, this study recommends the enhanced
use of public spending to stimulate the private consumption.
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Keywords
Private Consumption, Government Spending, Autoregressive Distributed Lag, Kenya
Citation
10.36347/sjebm.2017.v04i09.003