This empirical study of the growth of government total expenditure in Nigeria from 1960 to 2014 is to determine whether Wagner’s law of expanding state activity on the long run is applicable and extendable to other environmental contexts. The paper discusses the applicability of Wagner’s model and hypothesis to Nigeria. The study adopts the ordinary least squares (OLS) quantitative analysis to test the proposition. Results show that the growth of government expenditure in Nigeria was largely explained by the growth in debt servicing, per-capita GDP and inflation rate. The paper thus concludes that the stage of economic development consistent with ‘Wagner’s law’ is still potent in explaining the rise of government expenditure in Nigeria. Sev...
This study tests Wagner’s Law (the tendency for government activities to expand along with economic ...
This empirical study of the structure and growth trend of government total expenditure in Nigeria fr...
This study investigates the Keynesian and Wagnerian views on public expenditure and economic growth ...
Wagner’s Law suggests that as the economic activity of a country increases, so does its government e...
This study empirically tests if the Wagner’s law stands for the Nigerian economy using data for the ...
This study empirically tests if the Wagner’s law stands for the Nigerian economy using data for the ...
Abstract. Nigerian data covering 1981 to 2018 were applied to affirm Wagner’s law with respect to th...
This study tests Wagner’s law in Nigeria in both the short and long-run using the autoregressi...
This study empirically tests if the Wagner’s law stands for the Nigerian economy using data for the ...
Wagner’s Law is the first model of public spending in the history of public finance. The study tests...
This study tests Wagner’s law in Nigeria in both the short and long-run using the autoregressive dis...
Wagner’s law viewed that public expenditure is a consequence rather than cause of national income he...
Wagner’s Law is the first model of public spending in the history of public finance. The study tests...
Policy ambiguity in the form of non-directional and non-purposeful use of state resources has made s...
Policy ambiguity in the form of non-directional and non-purposeful use of state resources has made s...
This study tests Wagner’s Law (the tendency for government activities to expand along with economic ...
This empirical study of the structure and growth trend of government total expenditure in Nigeria fr...
This study investigates the Keynesian and Wagnerian views on public expenditure and economic growth ...
Wagner’s Law suggests that as the economic activity of a country increases, so does its government e...
This study empirically tests if the Wagner’s law stands for the Nigerian economy using data for the ...
This study empirically tests if the Wagner’s law stands for the Nigerian economy using data for the ...
Abstract. Nigerian data covering 1981 to 2018 were applied to affirm Wagner’s law with respect to th...
This study tests Wagner’s law in Nigeria in both the short and long-run using the autoregressi...
This study empirically tests if the Wagner’s law stands for the Nigerian economy using data for the ...
Wagner’s Law is the first model of public spending in the history of public finance. The study tests...
This study tests Wagner’s law in Nigeria in both the short and long-run using the autoregressive dis...
Wagner’s law viewed that public expenditure is a consequence rather than cause of national income he...
Wagner’s Law is the first model of public spending in the history of public finance. The study tests...
Policy ambiguity in the form of non-directional and non-purposeful use of state resources has made s...
Policy ambiguity in the form of non-directional and non-purposeful use of state resources has made s...
This study tests Wagner’s Law (the tendency for government activities to expand along with economic ...
This empirical study of the structure and growth trend of government total expenditure in Nigeria fr...
This study investigates the Keynesian and Wagnerian views on public expenditure and economic growth ...