Original Research

The heterogeneous effects of financial openness on income inequality in sub-Saharan Africa

Pieter Opperman, Anthanasius Fomum Tita
South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences | Vol 28, No 1 | a6037 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/sajems.v28i1.6037 | © 2025 Pieter Opperman, Anthanasius Fomum Tita | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 14 December 2024 | Published: 10 October 2025

About the author(s)

Pieter Opperman, Stellenbosch Business School, Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa
Anthanasius Fomum Tita, Department of Finance, Faculty of Economics and Management Sciences, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa

Abstract

Background: The external determinants of income inequality include financial globalisation or financial openness. The world is increasingly financialised and forms of cross-border investment have grown significantly. Over the past two decades, income inequality and financial globalisation have increased in various countries.
Aim: This study investigated the relationships between different de facto components of financial openness and income inequality.
Setting: Annual panel data for 43 sub-Saharan African countries from 1990 to 2021.
Method: The study employed a moments-quantile regression (MM-QR) estimation procedure that can reveal disregarded heterogeneous covariance effects in panel data models and allow for endogenous explanatory variables.
Results: The findings revealed that foreign direct investment (FDI) and portfolio equity are associated with increases in income inequality, with FDI having a more pronounced effect in more unequal countries and portfolio equity having a less pronounced effect in such contexts. Debt reduces income inequality across all quantile levels, with the strongest effects observed in more unequal countries.
Conclusion: The findings highlight the complex relationship between financial openness and inequality, shaped by its components and inequality levels.
Contribution: The study contributes to the literature as only a limited number of studies have investigated the relationship between overall de facto financial openness, its various components and income inequality in sub-Saharan Africa. The use of a quantile regression approach contributes to the small number of empirical studies employing this approach when investigating the link between financial openness and income inequality.


Keywords

financial openness; income inequality; MM-QR; panel data; sub-Saharan Africa

JEL Codes

F36: Financial Aspects of Economic Integration; O16: Financial Markets • Saving and Capital Investment • Corporate Finance and Governance; O55: Africa

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 10: Reduced inequalities

Metrics

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Crossref Citations

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