96 
Home Page  

  • SciELO

  • Google
  • SciELO
  • Google


Lecturas de Economía

 ISSN 0120-2596

MENDEZ-HERAS, Lizethe; VENEGAS-MARTINEZ, Francisco    SOLIS-ROSALES, Ricardo. Finance and Growth in Mexico: Who Contributes the Most: the Banks or the Stock Market?. []. , 96, pp.235-278.   05--2022. ISSN 0120-2596.  https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.le.n96a344224.

This paper studies the relationship between the financial structure and the economic growth of Mexico during 1980-2014. The literature identifies two types of financial structure: bank-based and stock-market-based. In the first, commercial banking positively impacts economic activity, while in the second, the stock market influences the performance of the economy. A third view considers that all financial activity (banks, stock market and other financial institutions) influences growth. These hypotheses are assessed by using a VEC model. The empirical findings suggest that, considering the liquidity of the financial system, stock market activity predominates throughout the study period; but when we take the size of the financial system, banking activity prevails. We also show that increasing financial system liquidity had a positive effect on economic growth, although increasing the size of the financial system decreased the GDP per capita over the period 1980-2014. Moreover, the short-term dynamic analysis reveals that if the financial structure became more marketed-oriented, the effect on economic growth would be positive.

: financial structure; economic growth; banking sector; stock market.

        · | |     · |     · ( pdf )