Abstract:
There is a credit market failure in Ethiopia, as evidenced by constraints on banks giving
agricultural credit, unbalanced economic sector finance, and worse agricultural credit 
performance. It is possible to look into the seriousness of these problems using a variety of 
techniques. The analysis of macroeconomic and bank-specific variables that influence 
agricultural credit and the performance of agricultural finance, as well as how agricultural 
finance influenced Ethiopia's export performance with key trading partners and economic 
development, were the objectives of the study. Secondary Time series data (1981 to 2021) 
from the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, World Governance Indicators, and 
National Bank of Ethiopia were collected and used to determine the factors that influence 
agricultural credit provisions, performance of agricultural credits and the relationship 
between agriculture credit and economic development of Ethiopia. In addition, panel data 
from the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, World Governance Indicators, 
National Bank of Ethiopia and World Commodities Trade data were gathered from 2000 to 
2020 and used to analyze the effects of agriculture credit on Ethiopian export performances
with 17 major trading partners. The Autoregressive Distributive Lag (ARDL) approach is 
used to determine the variables that affect agricultural credit, performances, and its impact 
on economic development of the country. In addition, the study employed the two-step system 
generalized moment method to analyze dynamic panel data between agricultural credit and 
Ethiopian export performance with key trading partners (SGMM). The long-run agriculture 
credit ARDL model results show that, GDP, number of bank branches, currency out of bank, 
and trade openness all have significant positive effects on bank agriculture credit. Climate 
change and foreign direct investment have a long-term negative impact on agricultural 
credit. Furthermore, in the short run, agriculture credit lag, currency out of bank, number of 
bank branches, foreign direct investment and trade openness all have significant positive 
effects on bank agriculture credit disbursement. In addition, the significant adjustment 
toward Equilibrium Error correction (ECT) confirms the existence of a long-run equilibrium 
relationship among the variables included. From the agriculture credit nonperforming loan 
model. Only five variables, Probability of Credit Default, Interest Rate Margin, and Number 
xv
of Branch's, have significant positive effects on bank agriculture credit in the long run, while 
Real GDP Growth and Institutional Quality have significant negative effects on agriculture 
nonperforming loans. As expected, there is no significant relationship between bank 
agriculture credit and agriculture non-performing loan. ECT's short run error correction 
coefficient is also statistically significant. This demonstrates that the deviation of agricultural 
credit nonperforming loans from equilibrium values is corrected the following year. Human 
development index ARDL model result also revealed that agriculture credit, board money 
supply, life expectancy, and trade openness all have positive long-run effects on HDI. 
However, in the short run, money supply has a negative significant effect on economic 
development, whereas life expectancy, saving deposits, and inflation have positive effects. 
The presence of a significant ECT confirms the existence of a long-run equilibrium 
relationship among the variables included in the mode. More importantly, the relationship 
between bank agricultural credits and HDI is unidirectional or agriculture credit induce 
economic development. Finally, the system generalized moment method (SGMM) was used to 
capture the effect of agriculture credit on export value with major trading partner. The 
results show that foreign direct investment, exporter country GDP, agriculture credit, and 
lag of last year export value have a significant effect on current export value with major 
trading partner. At end, the policy implication for this study is that adequate attention must 
also be paid to improving agricultural credit and agriculture credit performance. 
Stakeholders should develop policies that encourage agriculture finance rather than treating 
it as a separate strategy from economic development; rather, it should be treated as an 
integral component of the same strategy.