The impact of climate change on the resilience of banking systems in selected Sub-Saharan economies

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
The impact of climate change on the resilience of banking systems in selected Sub-Saharan economies
Abstract
Climate change is seen as a peril to the overall financial system, yet this revelation is in its infant stage. On that note, this study investigates the impact of climate change shocks on banking system resilience in selected Sub-Saharan economies. The study relies on a quantitative research method by first employing a Generalized Auto Regressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (GARCH) (1,1) model to forecast the volatility series of the climate change variables. Further, the study applies the panel ARDL model to disseminate the longand short-term associations between the obtained conditional variances of climate change parameters and banking system resilience within a time frame of 1996-2017 for 29 selected economies. The results show that banking systems in SSA are resilient to temperature shocks in the long-term. However, the study finds that the banking systems in SSA are not resilient to both precipitation and greenhouse gas shocks in the long-term. For the short-term impact assessment, the study finds that banking systems in SSA are resilient to only precipitation shocks. The study concludes that banking sectors in SSA should vigorously conduct stress-testing on climate-related financial risks and also design forward-looking strategies as well as climate change risk management procedures in the wake of climate change events.
Publication
International Journal of Applied Economics, Finance and Accounting
Volume
17
Issue
2
Pages
469-482
Date
2023-10-16
Journal Abbr
IJAEFA
Language
en
ISSN
2577-767X
Accessed
09/03/2024, 16:44
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Amo-Bediako, E., Takawira, O., & Choga, I. (2023). The impact of climate change on the resilience of banking systems in selected Sub-Saharan economies. International Journal of Applied Economics, Finance and Accounting, 17(2), 469–482. https://doi.org/10.33094/ijaefa.v17i2.1203