Sara E. Bennett
Lynchburg College
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sara E. Bennett.
Applied Economics | 2016
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Neville R. Norman; Sara E. Bennett
ABSTRACT The article investigates causal relationships between internet penetration rates, financial depth and per capita economic growth in the Next-11 countries. Using panel vector autoregressive (VAR) approaches, our empirical results show that these variables are cointegrated. Moreover, we find bidirectional causality between internet penetration rates and economic growth, and between financial depth and economic growth in the short run.
Venture Capital: An International Journal of Entrepreneurial Finance | 2017
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Mahendhiran Nair; Sara E. Bennett
Abstract Venture capital (VC) is a key catalyst for nurturing start-up firms with high-growth potential to undertake innovative endeavors that contribute to national wealth. Existing literature concentrates on the impact of venture capital on firm-level performance. Unlike much of the earlier work, we conduct a macro study examining short-term and long-term relationships between VC investment, the state of the financial sector, and economic growth in 20 European single market countries between 1989 and 2015. We show that major transformations (political, economic, financial and institutional) over the sample period in the Eurozone region have resulted in the data series used in the study (economic growth, financial sector development, and VC investment) to be non-stationary. As such, the vector error-correction model (VECM) and Granger-Causality test are used to examine short-term and long-term relationships between VC investment, financial development, and economic growth for the sample countries. The findings suggest that economic growth strategies and financial sector reforms are critical for a vibrant venture capital industry. In the short term, there are bi-directional relationships between some of the variables. These results suggest that plans to create a vibrant venture capital industry will reinforce financial sector development and economic development, creating a more sustainable economic development model for countries in the Eurozone region.
Macroeconomics and Finance in Emerging Market Economies | 2017
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Sahar Bahmani; Sara E. Bennett
ABSTRACT This paper examines the mutual relationship between broadband penetration, financial development, and economic growth in the 22 Arab League countries for the period between 2001 and 2013. Financial development (represented by broad money supply, claims on the private sector, domestic credit to the private sector, domestic credit provided by the banking sector, market capitalization, turnover ratio, and traded stocks) is assessed both individually, and by a composite index. Our results reveal that there is a long-run equilibrium relationship between broadband penetration, financial development, and economic growth. Additionally, we use a panel vector autoregression model to reveal the nature of Granger causality between the covariates. The most important insight of this study is the presence of bidirectional causality from economic growth to broadband penetration in the long run. In addition, we find that financial development together with broadband penetration Granger-cause economic growth in the long run.
Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences | 2017
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; John H. Hall; Sara E. Bennett; Sahar Bahmani
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to shed light on the age-old trade-and-economic-growth controversy. The authors do so by utilizing the data relating to the G-20 countries between 1988 and 2013. Design/methodology/approach - The authors seek to establish the formal statistical links between openness to trade and economic growth in the context of interactions with financial depth, gross capital formation, and foreign direct investment. The authors use a panel vector autoregressive model to obtain the estimates. The authors check for the robustness of the results. Findings - The authors find that all the variables are cointegrated. That is, there is a long-run equilibrium relationship between the variables. Moreover, trade openness, financial depth, gross capital formation, and foreign direct investment are all causative factors for the economic growth of the G-20 countries in the long run. At the same time, the short-run results demonstrate that there is a myriad of causal links between these variables. Practical implications - The decision makers in the G-20 countries wishing to encourage economic growth in the long run should pay close attention to trade openness, financial depth, gross capital formation, and foreign direct investment inflows to their countries. Originality/value - The authors study an important group of countries over a long span of time, using advanced panel data techniques. The results demonstrate that future studies on economic growth that do not simultaneously consider trade openness, financial depth, foreign direct investment, and gross capital formation will offer biased or misguided results.
Technology in Society | 2017
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Sahar Bahmani; Sara E. Bennett
Asia-pacific Financial Markets | 2016
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Sara E. Bennett; Mahendhiran Nair; John H. Hall
Empirical Economics | 2017
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Sahar Bahmani; Sara E. Bennett; John H. Hall
Journal of Multinational Financial Management | 2018
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Mahendhiran Nair; Sara E. Bennett; Sahar Bahmani; John H. Hall
Energy | 2018
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; Mahendhiran Nair; Sara E. Bennett; John H. Hall
Economia e Politica Industriale: Journal of Industrial and Business Economics | 2018
Rudra P. Pradhan; Mak B. Arvin; John H. Hall; Sara E. Bennett