1. Introduction
Mixed reactions have trailed the implications of inflation and instability of the exchange rate for GDP in economic literature. This is because the association between instability of the exchange rate and GDP constitutes a major issue for developing and emerging economies. Furthermore, there has been no consensus about findings on the nexus between volatility in the exchange rate and inflation-GDP. Most important is the tripartite relationship between volatility in the exchange rate, inflation and GDP from a regional perspective. The recent past has witnessed an increasing degree of inter-dependence among member countries of the SADC (
Ogujiuba 2021), and as rightly observed by
Mahawiya et al. (
2020), one major strength of the African economic community is the issue of regional integration. While this type of strength can be beneficial to countries in terms of trade, economic stability, infrastructural development and overall improvement in the standard of living, it can also come with some costs. Notable among these costs are the contagion and spill-over implications of volatility of the exchange rate on GDP through inflation (UN-WESP 2020). Economists over time have therefore attempted to examine the individual effects of these costs on the economic performance of countries without much reference to the regional consequences of volatility in the exchange rate
cum inflation pass-through (See
Ogujiuba and Abraham 2013;
Barguellil et al. 2018;
Ehikioya 2019;
Lean and Ehigiamusoe 2019).
SADC countries exhibit diverse levels of development in terms of inflation, per-capital income, economic growth and exchange rate, with South Africa dominating its economic activities at 68% of the total regional Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at the end of 2018 (
Ncube et al. 2017;
SADC Outlook 2018;
SADC Outlook 2019). However, prior to 2019, South African economic agents have sometimes managed to keep the inflation rate below 6.0 percent but failed in 2007 to 2009 when the CPI was 7.1 percent (
Ogujiuba and Themba 2020). Nonetheless, as contained in the Integrated Paper on Recent Economic Development in
SADC Outlook (
2014), the average inflationary rate for the region reduced from 8.0% in 2012 to 6.6% in 2013. Malawi was the worst hit during this period, as it recorded a double-digit inflation rate of 22.9% in 2012 and 28.6% in 2013 because of an uncontrollable rise in food prices. Furthermore, the SADC Outlook report of 2019 further showed an average inflationary rate of 9.3% in 2017 and a projected rate of 10.6% in 2018 for the region. In terms of growth, the 2019 edition of the SADC Outlook reported that the region experienced sluggish GDP growth of 4% in 2010 to 1.2% in 2018, while 2.2% and 2.8% were projected for 2019 and 2020, respectively. In 2018, South Africa, which contributed 68% to the total GDP of the region, had a less than 1% GDP growth rate. Between 2011 and 2013, the GDP of the region improved to 3.9% after the financial crisis of the previous years but went down again to 1.7% in 2017 because of the 2014–2016 reduction in prices of oil and commodity outputs. Resulting from the volatility of oil and commodity prices, coupled with the uncertainty in the emerging market of South Africa, most of the countries’ national currencies lost ground in 2018 and were projected to experience more in 2019 (
SADC Outlook 2019). With the current Covid-19 pandemic that has ravaged the global economy, the story is expected to be appalling at the end of the day.
Further, most of the countries within the region also experienced a varying degree of exchange rate instability, as revealed in
Table 1. For example, Angola, which is a major net oil income earner, experienced currency depreciation throughout the period between 2008 and 2018, while Eswatini and Lesotho experienced appreciation during the years of 2010, 2011, 2017 and 2018 in currencies, because of the influence of the South African Rand. Botswana also experienced a similar trend in Pula and against the USD during the above period of assessment. At the beginning of the period, the South African Rand was exchanged for R8.19 to one US
$ but appreciated to R7.18 in 2011 before an alarming deprecation to R14.80 in 2016. The Seychelles’ Rupee appreciated by 12.4% between 2012 and 2013 and went down to 13.46 in 2016, 15.93 in 2017 and 12.89 in 2018.
As observed, Malawi was the worst hit, with an over 600% depreciation in its currency between 2008 and 2018. The summary of the above table is that the countries within the SADC experienced a varying degree of challenges in terms of exchange rate instability, inflation and unstable economic performance. These issues are connected, and as rightly opined by
Taderera et al. (
2021), inflation is the channel through which the effect of volatility in the exchange rate is passed onto GDP. The need to study the role of instability of the exchange rate inflation-GDP nexus from a regional perspective was anchored on four issues: (i) the study of instability of the exchange rate in the inflation-GDP nexus will aid in achieving the goal of regional macroeconomic stability (
Osabuohien et al. 2018;
Mahonye and Zengeni 2019); (ii) instability of the exchange rate that leads to currency depreciation may aggravate inflation, such that export may be less competitive in eliminating possible deficits in the balance of payments and debt-relieving challenges, and as such, the expected benefits from depreciation may be an elusive thing (
Chipili et al. 2017;
Revelli 2020); (iii) most of the countries within the SADC are external-sector-driven, and the need to make it competitive in developing economies has long been emphasized in economic literature (
Leichter et al. 2010, Ucube et al. 2017;
OECD 2020), and finally, (iv) like many African countries, inflation and exchange rate instability are issues to contend with in the SADC region, and therefore, the need to examine their effects on economic growth has become a continuous academic exercise; (
Vilakazi 2018).
This article, which is a deviation from previous studies, investigates the complementary consequences of exchange rate instability and the rate of inflation on the GDP of 13 SADC countries. spanning from 2000 through to 2018. The choice of this region was informed by its uniqueness in terms of economic integration and historical antecedents. This region was affected (just as other regions) by previous economic crises such as the global financial and commodity crises of 2007–2009 and 2014–2016. These crises led to fluctuations in some key macroeconomic indices, including inflation and exchange rate. For instance, and on a country-by-country analysis, the South African Rand was exchanged for R8.25 to 1US
$ but appreciated to R7.25 in 2011; then, it depreciated to R14.71 in 2016. The Seychelles’ Rupee appreciated by 12.4% between 2012 and 2013 and went down to 13.32 in 2016, 16.65 in 2017 and 13.92 in 2018. Further, virtually all the countries in this region experienced volatility in their exchange rate during the period under consideration. This study shows the extent to which the combined effects of exchange rate volatility and inflation affect the economic growth in the SADC. Undoubtedly, much has not been said in this extant economic literature. Closer to this study is the works of
Mahonye and Zengeni (
2019) and
Taderera et al. (
2021), which assessed the transmission effect of exchange rate volatility on inflation and its contractionary impact on economic growth for Zimbabwe. Unfortunately, the studies were time-series-based and did not examine the potential consequences of inflation and volatility in the exchange rate on the GDP of the country, especially the cross-border effects of these relationships. Consequently, this study comes with an innovation in its examination of the mixed implications of inflation and volatility in the exchange rate on the GDP growth rate in the SADC region. Authors such as
Caselli and Roitman (
2016) and
Nshia et al. (
2019) posit that one similarity of countries within the same economic integration is proximity, and the need to understand the policy implication of exchange rate variation on inflation by policy makers was emphasized. This may be true of the SADC with its geographical proximity and macroeconomic policies alignments. Nonetheless, the Southern African Developing Community (SADC), as an economic bloc, is not an exception in the inflation passthrough and exchange rate variation hypothesis. Using 13 selected countries within the SADC for data spanning from 2000 to 2018, this study had two major objectives to accomplish: firstly, we examined the combined consequences of inflation and exchange rate volatility on the GDP and, secondly, showed the extent to which exchange rate volatility influences the inflation-GDP nexus. This is unique because of the historical background and economic antecedents of member countries of this region.
Studies have employed the Portfolio Balance Model, Interest Rate Parity Theory, Traditional Flow Theory, Purchasing Power Parity, etc. to explain the exchange rate volatility-growth hypothesis. With the nature of exchange rate practices within the SADC countries, which are a mixture of pegged and flexible ones, this study relied solely on the Purchasing Price Parity, which acknowledges the way volatility in the exchange rate influences the GDP of a nation through inflation. For instance, some countries in the SADC practice a flexible exchange rate, while others operate a pegged system. Therefore, we prefixed on the purchasing power parity (PPP) that addresses the effect of volatility in the exchange rate on economic growth through factors of economic growth itself, such as inflation. In theory, up and down movements in the exchange rate are a result of the dynamic nature of the business environment and changes in other macroeconomic indices, such as the level of inflation. The exchange rate, in its commonest sense, is the rate at which a local currency is exchanged with foreign currency. A rise in the movement of a currency relative to foreign currency represents an appreciation, while a downward movement is depreciation.
2. Review of Related Literature
In economic literature, exchange rate has been shown as an important component in determining both short- and long-run macroeconomic objectives of growth and development (
Ehikioya 2019;
Alagidede and Ibrahim 2017;
Iyke and Odhiambo 2014). As noted by
Alagidede and Ibrahim (
2017), exchange rate volatility, which is a persistent fluctuation in the exchange rate, is one of the topical issues in recent times because of the effects on economic activities. Furthermore, inflation, which is another economic challenge confronting many of the SADC countries, has been argued as either having a positive or negative relationship with economic growth (
Baharumshah et al. 2016). This is indicative of the fact that the combined effects of these challenges could be deleterious to an economy and snowballed into cross-border effects. Opinions vary about the association between exchange rate volatility and its effect on macroeconomic performance. While some have argued that exchange rate instability drives economic growth in an economy (
Ozcelebi 2018), others have argued that it hampers the growth process (
Barguellil et al. 2018). Possible reason for the differences in the findings of researchers may have emanated from data usage, methodology, the period of study and country-specific features (
Phiri 2018). In separate studies,
Chamunorwa and Choga (
2015) and
Ngondo and Khobai (
2018) employed different methodologies (while the former employed GARCH, the later adopted ARDL) in assessing the relationship between exchange rate and export output for South Africa and concluded that instability in the exchange rate affects output negatively. On the other hand,
Katusiime et al. (
2016) employed the ARDL model for Uganda and submitted that shocks in the exchange rate influenced GDP positively.
Nigeria and South Africa were the focus of
Balcilar et al. (
2019), where stickier prices were recorded for South Africa than Nigeria in the study that examined the influence of exchange rate variation on inflation in both countries.
Munthali et al. (
2010) embraced how real effective exchange rate shocks contribute to the GDP of Malawi and found a negative and statistically significant correlation between these variables.
Mahonye and Zengeni (
2019) suggested, in a study on the influence of variations in the exchange rate on inflation and its attendant implications on economic growth for Zimbabwe, that real exchange rate devaluation for the country could be inflationary and that the move has the tendency of encouraging exports and, consequently, boosting economic performance in the country. This is an argument that is neither here nor there about the relationship between the country’s exchange rate devaluation and GDP.
Roger et al. (
2019) investigated the link between GDP, exchange rate pass-through and the copper price for Zambia and concluded that a decline in inflation was a good determinant of exchange rate volatility.
Serenis and Tsounis (
2014) examined the exchange rate on export for three African countries, namely Malawi, Morocco and South Africa, and reported a reduction in the overall trade because of exchange rate volatility. Although the multivariate cointegration ECM with two different measurements of volatility was introduced in the study, this led to different policy recommendations for the countries under investigation. This is an indication that the reason for the differences in recommendation was the sensitivity of the study in terms of volatility measurement. Furthermore,
Iyke and Odhiambo (
2014) examined the performance of exchange rate regimes in three SADC countries, namely the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Malawi and Mozambique, and the effect of these regimes on economic growth. Using data with trend, detailed graphical and growth rate analyses, the study found out that exchange rate volatility depressed economic growth between 1960 and 1990, when a fixed exchange regime was practiced, and caused a moderate-to-rapid growth for 1990 and 2010, when a managed-floating exchange rate was introduced. This is a pointer to the fact that the effects of exchange rate volatility depend on the type of exchange rate under practice.
Considerable studies have examined the link between exchange rate and economic growth in recent times (
Morina et al. 2020;
Ioan et al. 2020). The effect of real exchange rate instability was investigated by
Morina et al. (
2020), with an observation that low level of exchange rate volatility is required for growth. The study, which employed the fixed effect model of analysis, further supported trade openness and fixed capital formation as other variables that enhances steady economic growth within the Central and Eastern European Countries.
Other studies further argued that exchange rate policy differs in its effects on economic growth of countries because the exchange rate is more volatile under a flexible exchange rate regime than a fixed exchange rate system (
Janus and Riera-Crichton 2015;
Alper 2017;
Barguellil et al. 2018;
Assoumou-Ella 2018). For instance, in the case of the flexible exchange rate regime,
Barguellil et al. (
2018) found in their study that exchange rate volatility affected economic growth negatively in 45 developing and emerging countries under review. Further, few studies conducted on the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries have produced mixed results between exchange rate variation and macroeconomic performance. The result by
Janus and Riera-Crichton (
2015) on some OECD countries revealed an inverse correlation between exchange rate changes and the GDP. In another study, a positive association was shown in the results of the Panel Vector Autoregression models on the interplay of exchange rate volatility, inflation rate and returns on stocks for 10 OECD countries by
Ozcelebi (
2018). The Impulse Response outcome of the VAR of the study further revealed that volatility of the exchange rate could impact positively on economic activities via a fall in interest rate. However, a high influence of exchange rate on the inflation trend was discovered with an insignificant statistical level of measurement.
Barguellil et al. (
2018) used the system GMM estimators on a sample of 45 developing and emerging countries between 1985 and 2015 and found an inverse association between exchange rate movement and GDP in the case study. A similar study by
Lean and Ehigiamusoe (
2019) on volatility in the exchange rate and the finance-growth nexus in the West African region showed that financial deepening exhibits long-term positive effects on the GDP within the region, even though this effect is weakened by exchange rate variation. The implication of this is that the desired benefit of financial development on the GDP may not be realized unless there is a reduced and stabilized real exchange rate. Furthermore, the time-series data approach to the link between exchange rate, inflation and GDP by
Hoanga et al. (
2020) observed that a rising exchange rate affected economic growth in Vietnam through inflation and suggested macroeconomic policies that will moderate the effect of exchange rate variation on inflation and economic growth to achieve the desired macroeconomic stability for the country. The years of 1980 to 2011 were the target of
Janus and Riera-Crichton (
2015), where a negative association was confirmed between real effective exchange rate changes and GDP for a panel of OECD countries. This was also embraced for Turkey by
Alper (
2017), in that exchange rate instability reduces the outflow of export components of the GDP in the short run but was positive and negative in the long run for import inflows. In sum, exchange rate variation and the GDP relationship, as shown from above findings, support the conventional theory of growth that says volatility in the exchange rate depresses economic growth through low investment and international trade reduction while adding up to the challenges of human capital insurance.
With respect to the inflation–growth nexus, different arguments have permeated the empirical literature, in that the effect of inflation on economic growth could either be positive or negative, depending on the methodology, data and country-specific features (
Baharumshah et al. 2016;
Akinsola and Odhiambo 2017;
Anidiobu et al. 2018;
Phiri et al. 2018). Earlier empirical studies, such as
Fischer (
1993),
Bruno and Easterly (
1995) and
Huybens and Smith (
1999), established that inflation affects economic growth positively, with a caveat that only high inflation reduces productivity and economic activities in an economy. Without much contradiction,
Ha et al. (
2019) acknowledged the regional consequences of exchange rate instability on inflation and GDP in their investigations. While a positive influence of inflation on GDP had been well researched, the adverse consequences of not keeping it at bay, especially in developing countries, such as in the SADC community, had equally been acknowledged (
Baharumshah et al. 2016). From a theoretical standpoint, the Mundell–Tobin theory posits that some level of inflation is good for an economy because, during inflation, people move away from money holdings towards investment (financial assets). This is because the interest rate is driven down, and an increase in economic activity is achieved through improved accumulation of capital in the economy.
Thanh (
2015) and
Mahawiya et al. (
2020) employed a panel smooth transition regression model and obtained different results on the inflation threshold needed for economic growth in their separate studies. While
Thanh (
2015) suggested a threshold of 7.8% in a study on five ASEAN countries,
Mahawiya et al. (
2020) indicated 17.9% and 14.5% threshold levels of inflation for the ECOWAS and SADC, respectively. Any inflationary level beyond these could be detrimental to the regional financial and economic growth. This clearly shows that the inflation–growth hypothesis remains a topical issue for developing countries, especially in Africa.
Bittencourt et al. (
2015) employed panel time series data to examine the nexus between inflation and economic growth in 15 SADC countries and remarked that inflation was detrimental to the growth of the region. The study also observed that inflation offset the prospective Mundell–Fleming effect and significantly reduced economic activity in the region. Similarly,
Moyo and Le Roux (
2019) confirmed a negative relationship between inflation and economic growth in their study on interest rate reforms, inflation and investment channels to economic activities within the SADC regional bloc. On the contrary,
Phiri et al. (
2018) adopted a quantile regression method to investigate the nexus between inflation and the GDP growth rate in Ghana and South Africa and submitted that inflation impacts positively on the GDP growth rate for both countries but at different levels of inflationary thresholds. This was slightly supported in a study by
Anidiobu et al. (
2018). where inflation was shown as having a positive but insignificant effect on economic growth in Nigeria.
Taderera et al. (
2021) extended the frontier of knowledge on the inflation–growth debate by incorporating interest rate in their study on the interplay of inflation, rate of interest and the GDP within the Southern African Custom Union (SACU). In a study that employed the PMG technique, it was observed that inflation affects economic growth positively, and therefore, it was suggested that a sustainable inflation rate that guarantees the desired economic growth for member countries should be complimented with a moderate interest rate. With little deviation,
Vermeulen (
2015) introduced employment into the inflation–growth analysis for South Africa and submitted that anything that adversely affects productivity, such as inflation, will also affect employment generation. Looking at it from another perspective,
Moyo and Tursoy (
2020) researched the complementary effects of inflation and exchange rate volatility using commercial banks as an endogenous variable. This was not elaborate enough, as financial institutions, which commercial banks represent, are a sub-sector of economic activities of an economy. Similarly,
Jasova et al. (
2016) studied exchange rate volatility pass-through inflation in 33 emerging and advanced economies without incorporating economic growth and concluded that a decrease in the exchange rate pass-through in emerging economies is a function of reduced inflation. Corroborating this submission was the study by
Ha et al. (
2019) on the degree of co-movement between exchange rate instability and inflation for 55 emerging markets and developing economies where exchange rate variations were seen as having a negative effect on inflation in emerging economies. The caveat here was that this depended on the inflation threshold of the individual member country and period of investigation. In summary, these studies concluded that exchange rate volatility pass-through was low and stable for advanced economies but higher and deleterious in emerging economies.
Other studies with positive or non-linear relationships were
Ndoricimpa (
2017) and
Odhiambo and Bernard (
2017). The study by
Monfare and Akin (
2017) showed a negative and significant effect of inflation on economic growth. In
Ndoricimpa (
2017), a dynamic panel threshold regression approach was applied to examine the inflation–growth relationship, and it reported a nonlinearity nexus, in that the effects of inflation on economic growth differed between the low-income and middle-income countries of Africa. This was confirmed in the study of five Turkish Republics of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, where a nonlinear relationship was noticed between inflation and economic growth (
Aydin et al. 2016). To achieve and maintain consistent economic growth, there is the need to balance the contributions of exchange rate volatility and rising inflation on economic activities between evolving economies.
Basnet and Upadhyaya (
2015) reversed this relationship to the impact of shocks in the oil price on economic growth, inflation and exchange rate volatility for selected ASEAN countries, with an outcome that the effect of oil price instability did not affect economic activities in the long run (
Gbalayini,
2011;
Muhammad and Ghulam 2017;
Yakubu and Akanegbu 2019).
The summary from the above review is that opinions differ on how exchange rate imbalances, inflation and economic growth interact. However, a higher percentage of the reviews supported a negative association either between exchange rate instability and economic growth or inflation and GDP. It is therefore obvious that mixed and inconclusive results permeate opinions about the influence of exchange rate instability and inflation on economic growth. Aside from this, the lacuna is also obvious about the complementary contributions of exchange rate instability and inflation on economic growth from a regional perspective. This type of relationship has been adjudged as having cross-over effects on regional economic activities (
Ha et al. 2019). Therefore, in this research work, we try not only to support or debunk the correlation between exchange rate instability and GDP, on one hand, and inflation and GDP growth rate, on the other hand, but to further show the complementarity or substitutability of exchange rate imbalances and inflation on the economic growth rate of the SADC.
5. Concluding Remarks
This manuscript is a step further in the examination of the influence of exchange rate instability on the inflation–growth nexus at a regional level, using the SADC as case study. We examined the influence of exchange rate instability on the inflation–growth association in the Southern African Development Community for time series data spanning from 2000 to 2018. Specifically, the study hypothesized the relationships between exchange rate instability, inflation and economic growth on one hand and the interactive influence of exchange rate instability and inflation on economic growth on the other hand. Three different techniques of econometrics, namely the PMG, MG and DFG, were employed for the aggregated panel data, with a Hausman test suggesting the PMG as the best technique of analysis. We can therefore conclude that (i) exchange rate instability affects economic growth of the SADC negatively and, therefore, results in cost-push inflation, and (ii) inflation affected the economic fortune of the region negatively. There was also considerable evidence of imported inflation for the region; (iii) oil price’s influence on economic growth of the region was also shown to be negative, and (iv) the influence of exchange rate instability on the inflation–growth nexus was negative. This suggests that the negative effect of inflation on economic growth brought about by exchange rate imbalances could weaken economic growth of the region. These outcomes were all in line with extant literature, where it was established that what could guarantee regional economic advancement of developing countries is a stable exchange rate coupled with a moderate inflationary level (
Caselli and Roitman 2016) and (
Ogujiuba and Cornelissen 2020). It was established that exchange rate instability and inflation negatively eroded the economic growth of the region. Furthermore, exchange rate instability was shown as affecting economic growth adversely through inflation.
Several policy implications could be inferred from the findings of this study. Firstly, the adverse influence of exchange rate instability on economic growth of the region is an indication that monetary and fiscal policies employed to strengthen local currencies and discourage importation of certain goods and services have not yielded the desired results for the region. Second, apart from Botswana, Swaziland and a few other smaller countries, exchange rate instability and inflation have been a recurring decimal within the region. Monetary authorities of member countries should live up to their monetary policy responsibilities by ensuring that the adverse implications of exchange rate imbalances on economic growth are vigorously addressed through policy implementation and with necessary political will than ever before. Further, member countries should target a single digit inflation rate. Finally, the negative effect of the complimentary influence of exchange rate instability and inflation on economic growth suggests that existing policies in this direction have not been potent enough, and as such, a regional review of economic policies that will strengthen local currencies and encourage local production of semi-finished goods should be intensified.
In summary, macroeconomic policies that will further enhance local production of exports and ensure exchange rate stability with reduced inflationary pressures should be formulated and implemented. This should be complimented with fiscal measures against indiscipline in public spending on frivolities such as military budgeting since the region is not in war period. Raw materials for production and manufacturing of goods and services should be locally sourced to ameliorate the pressure from exchange rate volatility on local currencies. Our research equally established that the inflation–growth pass-through for the region was brought about by the adverse effect of exchange rate volatility on inflation. Above all, the diversification of domestic economies should be more prioritized. Nonetheless, this study was limited by the availability of data, and as such, all the countries within the SADC could not be captured. As a caveat, the outcomes of this study did not represent each individual country’s situation, as they only applied to the group of countries within the SADC sub-Saharan economic region. Furthermore, our econometric setting was limited to some macroeconomic variables considered relevant for the study. By extension, therefore, we suggest that the framework of this study be extended to other regional blocs in sub-Saharan Africa where the influence of exchange rate instability on the inflation–growth nexus has not been fully exploited. In addition, there should be a revisit of the ideal inflationary threshold for the SADC to make it more growth-driven and give room for future-looking policy formulation. Finally, linking the manufacturing sector of the region in a study like this will make an interesting study area. It is therefore hoped that the outcome of this study will assist the SADC and other regional blocs in formulating and implementing exchange rate policies that will not only strengthen the economic fortune of their regions, but also ensure exchange rate stability. Therefore, this study adds to existing knowledge and provides a framework for policy formulation by affirming that exchange rate instability and inflation separately affect the economic growth of the SADC negatively.