WORLD JOURNAL OF FINANCE AND INVESTMENT RESEARCH (WJFIR )
E-ISSN 2550-7125
P-ISSN 2682-5902
VOL. 6 NO. 1 2022
DOI: https://doi.org/10.56201/wjfir.v6.no1.2022.pg83.101
OGUNGBADE, Oluyinka Isaiah, ACA, PhD., EFUNTADE, Alani Olusegun, FCIB, ACA. EFUNTADE, Olubunmi Omotayo, PhD.
We reviewed literatures on the complex causality among oil revenue, non-oil revenue, fiscal risk factors and budget execution phase in relation to debt overhang and crowding-out theory. The majority of papers surveyed study on investigated the long-run and short-run relationship between fluctuations of oil price ; direction of causality between total revenue and total government spending ; the dynamics of the tax revenue and expenditure nexus, explored the impact of oil prices volatility on the key factors of the government budget, analyse the relationship between public expenditure and debt —little research in the area of the impact of oil price fluctuations on key macroeconomics variables. The evidence provided by the empirical literature is that there are indeed heterogeneous responses to position on complex causality among oil revenue, non-oil revenue, fiscal risk factors and budget execution phase in relation to debt overhang and crowding-out theory. It is detected that most study reviewed did not disintegrated relevant revenue: oil revenue (upstream oil revenues, downstream oil revenues, petroleum profit tax(PPT)); non-oil revenue (company income tax (CIT), value added tax (VAT), personal income tax ) and budget risk factors: oil price volatility (OPV)(OPEC Spot OPV, Brent OPV, West Texas Intermediate OPV), public debt (external public debt, domestic public debt), debt servicing (external debt interest service and domestic debt interest service) on budget execution phase (public expenditure: capital budget expenditure and recurrent budget expenditure). It is recommended that research effort should be made in answering the following research questions: what is the effect of oil revenue on budget implementation (public expenditure: capital expenditure and recurrent expenditure)? How non-oil tax revenue is correlates with budget implementation (public expenditure: capital expenditure and recurrent expenditure)? Of what effect is oil price vola
Oil revenue, non-oil revenue, fiscal risk factors, budget execution, debt overhang and crowding-out theory
Abdulla, A. (2012). Relationship between government revenue and expenditure in Qatar: A
cointegration and causality investigation. International Journal of Economics and
Finance,4(9),1-10.
Aguolu. O. (2004) Taxation and Tax Management in Nigeria, 3rd Edition, Enugu: Meridan
Associates.
A
lley, I. (2016). Oil price volatility and fiscal policies in oil-exporting countries. OPEC Energy
Review, 40(2), 192-211.
Al-Qudair, K. H. (2005). „The Relationship between Government Expenditure and Revenues in
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: Testing for Cointegration and Causality?, Journal of
King Abdul Aziz University. Islamic Economics ,19 (1), 31-43.
Antra, B. H.
Correction
(2015).
Productive Public Expenditure and Debt Dynamics: An Error
Representation using Indian Data. Working Paper No. 2015-149 May 2015 National
Institute of Public.
Aregbeyen, O. O., & Akpan, U. F. (2013). Long-term Determinants of Government Expenditure:
A Disaggregated Analysis for Nigeria. Journal of Studies in Social Sciences, 5(1), 31–
87.
Baharumshah, A. Z., Jibrilla, A. A., Sirag, A., Ali, H. A., & Mulammad, I. M. (2016). Public
revenue-expenditure nexus in south Afria: Are there asymmetries? South Africa Journal
of Economics,84(4),520-537.
Basha, M. H. (2015). Impact of fluctuations in crude oil prices on the Jordanian public budget for
the period of 1995-2013. European Scientific Journal,11(19),214-226.
Clements, B., Bhattacharya, R., Nguyen, T.Q. (2004), External debt, public investment, and
growth in low-income countries. IMF Working Paper WP/03/249, International Monetary
Fund.
Claessens, S. & Diwan, I. (1990). Investment incentives: New money, debt relief, and the critical
role of conditionality in the debt crisis. The World Bank Economic Review, 4,21-41.
Cohen, D. (1995). Large external debt and (slow) domestic growth: A theoretical analysis.
Journal
of Economic Dynamics and Control,19,1141-1163.
Deshpande, A. (1997). The debt overhang and the disincentive to invest. Journal of Development
Economic,52,169-187.
Dizaji, S.F. (2014). The effects of oil shocks on government expenditures and government
revenues nexus (with an application to Iran?s sanctions). Economic Modelling, 40,299-
313.
Duc-Anh, L., Cuong, L. V., Phu, N. V., & Arnelie, B. C. (2015). Government expenditure,
external and domestic public debts, and economic growth. BETA, CNRS and
Universite de Strasbourg and IPAG and CES, Universite Paris Pantheon-Sorbonne.
Ebrahim, E., Mohammad, A.A. (2012). Asymmetric impacts of oil prices and revenues
fluctuation
on selected macroeconomic variables in Iran. Journal of Basic and Applied Scientific
Research, 2(8),7930-7937.
Eltony, M.N. & Al-Awadi, M. (2001). Oil price fluctuations and their impact on the
macroeconomic variables of Kuwait: Acase study using a VAR model. International
Journal of Energy Research, 25,938-959.
Fasano, U. & Wang, Q. (2002), Testing the relationship between government spending and
revenue: Evidence from GCC Countries. Working Paper 06/74. Washington, DC:
International Monetary Fund.
Fasanya, O. I., Onakoya, A. B. O. & Adabanija, M. A., (2013). Oil discovery and sectoral
performance in Nigeria: An appraisal of the Dutch Disease. The IUP Journal of Applied
Economics,12(2),25-40.
Fasoye, K. (2018). Nigeria?s domestic debt profile (1980 –2017). Historical Research Letter, 47,
9-14.
Fosu, A. K. (2010). The external debt-servicing constraints and public expenditure composition
in
Sub-Saharan Africa. African Development Review,22(3),378-393.
Fosu, A. K. (2008). Implications of the External Debt -Servicing Constraint for Public Health
Expenditure in Sub-Saharan Africa. Oxford Development Studies, 36(4),363–377.
Fosu, A. K. (2011). The external debt burden and economic growth in the 1980s: Evidence from
Sub-Saharan Africa. Canadian Journal of Development Studies,2(2),307–318.
Grace, G. K. T. (2014). Impact of Shocks to Public Debt and Government Expenditure on
Human
Capital and Growth in Developing Countries. Journal of Economics and Behavioral
Studies,6,(1),44-67.
Hakhu, A. B. (2015). Productive public expenditure and debt dynamics: An error correction
representation using Indian data. National Institute of Public Finance and Policy. New
Delhi. Working Paper No. 2015-149. http://www.nipfp.org.in.
Hye, Q. M .A. & Jalil, M. A. (2010). Revenue and expenditure nexus: A case study of
Romania. Romanian Journal of Fiscal Policy,1(1),22-28.
Idenyi, O.S., Igberi, C.O. & Anoke, C.I. (2016). Public Debt and Public Expenditure in Nigeria:
A Causality Analysis. Research Journal of Finance and Accounting,7(10),27-38.
Ijirshar, V.U., Joseph, F. & Godoo, M. (2016). The relationship between external Debt and
Economic growth in Nigeria. International Journal of Economics & Management
Sciences,6(1),390-401.
Kabaklarli, E. (2016). The relationship between public sector revenue and expenditures in
Turkey.
Journal of Life Economics,3(10),143-153.
Karagol, E. (2004), External Debt and Economic Growth Relationship Using Simultaneous
Equations. Turkey: University of Balikesir.
Krugman, P. (1988). Financing vs. forgiving a debt overhang. Journal of Development
Economics,29,253-68.
Lojanica, N. (2015). Government expenditure and government revenue-the causality on the
example of the Republic of Serbia. Management International Conference(MIC),
Portoroz, Slovenia 28-30 May 2015.
Mutascu, M. (2016). Government revenues and expenditures in the East European economies: A
Bootstrap Panel Granger Causality approach. Eastern European Economics,56(6)1-14.
Panizza, U., Sturzenegger, F. & Zettelmeyer, J. (2010). International Government Debt.
UNCTAD
Discussion Paper No. 199. Geneva, UNCTAD, June2010.
Patenio, J.A.S., Agustina, T. (2007), Economic growth and external debt servicing of the
Philippines: 1981-2005:10thNational Convention on Statistics (NCS), October 1-2.
Rahma, E., Perera, N., & Tan, K. (2016). Impact of oil price shocks on Sudan?s government
budget. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy,6(2), 243-248.
Sachs, J. (1989). The debt overhang of developing countries. In Debt, Stabilisation and
Development. Edited by G. A. Calvo, J. K. Pentti and J. B. Macedo. Oxford: Blackwell.
Saunoris, J. W. (2013). The dynamics of the revenue-expenditure nexus: Evidence from U. S.
State
Government Finances. Public Finance Review,43(1),110-121.
Serieux, J. & Yiagadeesen S. (2001). The debt service burden and growth: Evidence from
low
Income countries. The North-South Institute, Ottawa. Available online at:
http://www.researchgate.net/publication.
Shabbir, S. & Yasin, H. M.(2015). Implications of Public External Debt for Social Spending: A
Case Study of Selected Asian Developing Countries. The Lahore Journal of Economics
20(1), 71–103.
Siddig, O., Noel, P., & Kian, T. (2016). Impact of oil price shocks on Sudan?s government
budget.
International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy,6(2),243-248.
Taylor, L. (1993). The Rocky Road to Reform: Adjustment, Income Distribution and Growth in
the Developing World. London: MIT Press.
Todaro,D.C.
P. M. & Smith, S. C. (2006). Economic Development, (9th edition). Washington
Pearson Education, Harlow.
Warner, A. M. (1991). Did the debt crisis cause the investment crisis? Board of Governors of
Federal Reserve System. International Finance Discussion Papers. Number 418.
December 1991.