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Meta-Analysis of Finance and Growth in Asia

Making Sense of Globalization

  • 2025
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About this book

This Palgrave Pivot offers a rigorous meta-analysis of the finance–growth relationship in Asia. Economists Amar Anwar and Ichiro Iwasaki highlight how financial development and liberalization affect growth differently in East Asia than in South Asia. Analyzing 759 estimates from 79 empirical case studies, the authors explore how financial development and liberalization affect economic growth in Asia, offering information to assist policy proposals and research.

Meta-Analysis of Finance and Growth in Asia is essential reading for researchers, policymakers, and anyone interested in financial reform and sustainable economic development.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
1. Introduction—Why Finance and Growth in Asia Still Matter
Abstract
Asia’s economic ascent over the past five decades is among the most significant transformations in modern development history. From Japan’s early industrial ascent and the rise of the Four Asian Tigers to China’s scale-driven industrialization and India’s services-led surge, the region’s experience has challenged conventional development theories. Across these varied trajectories, one constant has been the role of finance. Financial systems—whether bank-based, market-led, state-directed, or digitally driven—have both enabled and mirrored broader economic transitions.
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
2. Conceptual Foundations—Finance, Globalization, and Development Policy
Abstract
Theoretical perspectives on the finance–growth nexus have evolved significantly since the seminal insights of Schumpeter (1912), Gurley and Shaw (1955), and Goldsmith (1959), who each emphasized the catalytic role of financial systems in promoting innovation, mobilizing savings, reducing transaction costs, and efficiently allocating capital. These early theorists laid the foundation for the “supply-leading” hypothesis, which posits that financial development precedes and stimulates economic growth by fostering capital accumulation and technological progress. This viewpoint has been revisited and expanded by contemporary endogenous growth theorists, such as Romer (1986) and Lucas (1988), who underline how financial markets and institutions enhance total factor productivity through better allocation of resources and support for innovation-driven activities (Aghion, Howitt, and Mayer-Foulkes, 2005).
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
3. Mapping the Literature—Scope, Dataset, and Study Selection
Abstract
To compile a robust and policy-relevant dataset for this meta-analysis, we undertook a systematic literature search designed to identify empirical studies that examine the relationship between financial development, liberalization, and economic growth in the Asian context.
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
4. Methodological Framework—Meta-Regression Techniques and Innovations
Abstract
Meta-analysis has emerged as a powerful tool in empirical economics for synthesizing findings across diverse studies. In research areas characterized by methodological fragmentation and contextual variability—such as the finance–growth–globalization nexus in Asia—meta-analysis offers a systematic way to assess the prevailing patterns and implications emerging from the broader body of evidence.
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
5. Empirical Findings from the Meta-Analysis
Abstract
This chapter presents the core empirical results of the meta-analysis, beginning with meta-synthesis, followed by meta-regression analysis, robustness checks, and bias correction procedures. Before turning to the main findings, it is useful to briefly recall the structure of the dataset underpinning these analyses.
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
6. Publication Bias and the Credibility of Finance–Growth Evidence
Abstract
In the final stage of meta-analysis, we examine publication selection bias using a funnel plot, by conducting a goodness-of-fit test of proportional distribution and by performing an MRA test procedure consisting of a funnel-asymmetry test (FAT), a precision-effect test (PET), and a precision-effect estimate with standard error (PEESE), which are proposed by Stanley and Doucouliagos (2012) and have been used widely in recent meta-studies.
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
7. Conclusion—Rethinking Financial Development in an Interconnected Asia
Abstract
As debates about the role of finance in economic development continue to evolve, this study has sought to provide a more structured, comparative, and empirically grounded understanding of the finance–growth nexus in Asia. By synthesizing evidence from 79 studies and more than 750 effect sizes, and by systematically addressing methodological heterogeneity and publication selection bias, this meta-analysis offers a reassessment of where and how financial development contributes to economic growth across the region. The findings speak to both the promise and the complexity of finance in an interconnected Asia: while the overall relationship remains positive and statistically robust, its strength and reliability vary markedly by subregion, by the nature of financial globalization, and by the methodological choices of individual studies. This concluding chapter distills the study’s main insights, reflects on their implications for regional policy and financial reform, and outlines directions for future research.
Amar Anwar, Ichiro Iwasaki
Backmatter
Title
Meta-Analysis of Finance and Growth in Asia
Authors
Amar Anwar
Ichiro Iwasaki
Copyright Year
2025
Electronic ISBN
978-3-032-10219-5
Print ISBN
978-3-032-10218-8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-032-10219-5

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