This research aims to investigate the effect of banks' liquidity on its profitability; with the ordinary course of business and in the medium term (10 years). A quantitative analysis is performed on a statistical sample of forty (40) commercial banks in Bangladesh. Secondary data is used to evaluate the performance of the last ten years (2009-2018) of the annual report of the commercial banks in Bangladesh with 206 bank years of data gathered to consider all Bangladeshi commercial banks. Proposed variables are: LDR, DAR, CDR, LAR and CR as liquidity representation; on the other hand, ROE is the profitability representation. Five hypotheses have been established to assess the effect of liquidity on profitability. Following a correlation and regression analysis, it is observed that LDR, DAR and CDR had a substantial effect on the profitability measured as ROE, but LAR and CR proved insignificant. Therefore, it can be concluded that, in general, the impact of liquidity has a significant effect on the profitability in the commercial banking sector of Bangladesh. By relying on this report; Bangladeshi banks will be best positioned to keep equality between its liquidity and profitability. Keywords: Liquidity, Profitability, ROE, Commercial Banks
This study investigates the impact of a number of educational institutions and students per teacher on the literacy rate. Data of 489 Upazilasrelating to the dependent (literacy rate) and independent variables (no. of educational institutions and students per teacher of different types of primary and equivalent educational institutions) of 8 Divisions were collected from District Statistics 2011 of Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics. The Ordinary Least Square (OLS) method is used in this study. This research found that a number of government primary schools had a significant positive relationship with the literacy rate in Barishal, Chittagong, Khulna, and Mymensingh Divisions.
This study investigates the impact of democracy indices on the literacy rate. Panel Data of 134 Countries from 2007-2018 were collected from the website the World Bank and Gapminder. This study uses Ordinary Least Square (OLS), Pooled Ordinary Least Square (POLS), Driscoll-Kraay (DK), Second Stage Least Square (2SLS), Generalized Methods of Moments (GMM) methods. This research has found that political participation index and political culture index has a significant positive relationship with literacy rate in all the method. The functioning of the government index has a significant positive relationship and electoral process and the pluralism index has a significant negative relationship with literacy rate in all the methods except the GMM method. The civil liberties index has a significant negative relationship with literacy rate in POLS and in the other models, there is no significant relationship between the civil liberties index and literacy rate.
This study investigates the relationship of foreign direct investment (FDI) with major macroeconomic variables, explicitly gross domestic product (GDP), gross capital formation (GCF), agriculture, forestry and fishing (AFF), industry, import, export, inflation, and unemployment rate. Panel data from 205 countries from 1990 to 2018 were collected from the website of the World Bank. Robustness of the result has been ensured through the combined use of ordinary least squares (OLS), pooled ordinary least squares (POLS), Driscoll-Kraay (DK), two-stage least squares (2SLS) and generalized method of moments (GMM) models. This research has found that GDP and GCF had a significant positive relationship with FDI across all the models, while AFF and the unemployment rate had a significant negative and positive relationship with FDI in all models except the GMM model. Industry and import had a significant positive relationship with FDI in the POLS model, and export and inflation had no significant relationship with FDI in any model. Contribution/Originality:This study contributes to the existing literature through a utilitarian way to investigate the relationship of FDI with major macroeconomic variables globally. INTRODUCTIONThis paper analyzed the relationship between foreign direct investment (FDI) and macroeconomic variables including gross domestic product, gross capital formation, value addition of agriculture, forestry and fishing, value addition of industry including constructions, import of goods and services, export of goods and services, consumer price indices and unemployment rate. It is thought that there might be a link between foreign direct investments and these variables as all of these indicators, directly and indirectly, influence the gross domestic product of a country.Shiva and Agapi (2008) said foreign direct investment and trade are also seen as significant catalysts for developed countries' economic development. They introduced FDI as an important tool for the transition of technology from developed to emerging countries. Kueh, Puah, and Abu Mansor (2009) claimed that Malaysia's Asian Economic and Financial Review
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