This study x-rays the moderating influence of institutional quality on the relationship between the financial structure (FS) and economic growth in 33 Sub-Saharan African (SSA) economies from 2006 to 2022, based on income classification. Aptly utilizing the two-step fixed-effects generalized method of moments, the investigation found that, among the low-income countries, those bankand market-oriented were associated with the lower and higher levels of economic growth, respectively, whereas among the middle-income countries, those bankand market-oriented financial structures were associated with the higher and lower levels of economic growth, respectively. Notably, the study establishes that institutional quality does not substantially spur the financial structure to positively contribute to economic growth. The disaggregated outcomes show that prevailing institutional quality mitigates the growth effects of the financial structures of the middle-income economies, whereas it does significantly exacerbate decelerating economic growth among the low-income ones. The study recommends the adoption of policies to strengthen institutional quality, as well as the enhancement of the synergy between the banking sector and the capital market.
Efayena et al. (Wed,) studied this question.