FINANCE
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Item Financial development and shadow economy in Africa: evidence from panel quantile regression(Emeraid insight, 2023-06) Onwuka, I. O; Emmanuel, A."The study investigated the impact of financial development on shadow economy in Africa, using data for 41 African countries. The informal outputs, computed by Elgin et al. (2021), and the three financial development indicators were sourced from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) respectively. The dynamic panel quantile regression technique was employed as it captures better the nature of the African economy and the heterogeneous nature of the shadow economies. The study shows that average FIA and FID in Africa is 0.074 and 0.160 respectively; suggesting that accessing credit from financial institution, as well as the coverage of credit and other financial services in Africa is low and could be accompanied with high degree of bottlenecks. The FIE on average is 0.520; suggesting that credits from financial institution in Africa are used for their intended purposes. However, financial development must be pursued alongside other macroeconomic goals, particularly urbanization.Item Covid-19 and poverty assessment in Nigeria – the vulnerability approach(eGrove, 2021) Onwuka, I. O; Oroboghae, O. RPoverty alleviation has long been recognized as the implicit objective of national development in Nigeria. Indeed, successive governments in Nigeria has tinkered with different poverty alleviation measures since the early 1980s. Despite these concerted efforts by successive regimes in Nigeria, poverty has defied resolution. If any, poverty has been compounded by the current coronavirus pandemic, which has worsened the fate of the poor in Nigeria. Using analytical technique that is grounded on vulnerability theory, the study showed how the methodology of vulnerability can be applied to yield policy-relevant insights about the poverty dynamics in Nigeria and how the concept can be applied to predict the vulnerability of the poor in the country to the current coronavirus pandemic and future anthropogenic shocks.Item COVID-19 and Corporate Governance Performance: Beyond the Financial Metrics(IntechOpen, 2021) Onwuka, I. OCorporate governance and, more broadly, the performance of corporate boards have traditionally been measured using financial metrics. These financial metrics such as Return on Investment (ROI), Return on Assets (ROA), Return on Equity (ROE), Earnings and Profitability Ratio (E and P) are ex post measure of organizations performance arising from corporate board activities. These financial metrics are largely one-dimensional measure of corporate performance and do not fully account for the other dimensions of organization responsibilities. The COVID-19 and the changing organizational dynamics have made the case for corporate board’s performance to be assessed beyond the usual financial metrics. In this study, we provide a framework that accounts for the various dimensions of organization activities: finance, social and environmental, the Triple-Bottom (TBL) approach. A TBL-compliance metric was constructed, which tracked the performance of selected manufacturing firms in Nigeria using a content analytical technique. The result showed that the majority of the firms performed remarkably well in areas of profitability and economic value creation but less satisfactorily inareas of social and environmental sustainability. On aggregate, the sampled firms committed less than 1% of their profit after tax on corporate social responsibility, while less than 5% of the sampled firms scored above average on the TBL-adoption matrix.Item Tackling Poverty in Era of Covid-19 Pandemic: The Contributory Pension Option(Academic Journals, 2021-11) Onwuka, I. OIn December 2019, news broke out that a novel coronavirus has hit the city of Wuhan, China. It was reported that the SARS-CoV2 virus is responsible for the Covid-19 pandemic. The coronavirus pandemic has impacted severely on the country. As expected, the pandemic has worsened the fate of the poor and most vulnerable households in Nigeria. To cushion the impact, the federal government of Nigeria (FGN) has instituted various palliative measures including cash grants of N5,000 (US$14) monthly to approximately 1 million vulnerable households. However, a review of these measures shows that they are grossly inadequate and incapable of any meaningful impact on the suffering of the masses. The government is clearly hamstrung in this regard due to huge shortfalls in revenue as a result of the pandemic. To this end, the study reviewed the contributory pension scheme in Nigeria and recommended that government should leverage on the pension fund which is currently in excess of ₦7 trillion. The study argued that government should amend the extant regulatory framework for recovery of pension contribution to enable the contributors to access up to 30% of their contributions to help cushion the effect of the coronavirus pandemic. These withdrawals will be restored through increased accretion to the funds by government and private sector employers when normalcy returns to the country. This will help to alleviate the sufferings of over 9 million Nigerians who are currently enrolled on the pension scheme.Item Reversing Nigeria’s food import dependency - agricultural transformation(Eastern Centre of Science and Education (ECSE), 2017) Onwuka, I. ONigeria currently imports foods for domestic consumption of her citizens. This is puzzling because a greater percentage of her population is engaged in agriculture. This is despite the apparent neglect of agriculture since crude oil was discovered in commercial quantities in the early 1970s. Before the discovery of oil in exportable quantities, the country depended largely for her foreign exchange earnings on agricultural exports and the various regions in the country were quite active in agricultural production. The Northern region was noted for the groundnut pyramids that dotted the various parts of the region; the Western region for cocoa and the Eastern region were renowned for palm plantations. This success story was not sustained with the discovery of oil, as agriculture was abandoned and neglected by successive governments in the country. However, the decline in crude oil revenue since 2014 has once again exposed the vulnerability of Nigeria‟s dependence on crude oil as a major earner of foreign exchange. Consequently, Nigeria is finding it difficult to pay for its food import bills and there is hunger in the land. Using exploratory technique with anecdotal evidence, this study highlighted the dangers of relegating agriculture in Nigeria and placed analytical spotlight on agricultural transformation as a solution for reversing the country‟s food import dependency.Item COVID-19 and Corporate Governance Performance: Beyond the Financial Metrics(Hilaris publishing, 2021) Onwuka, I. OCorporate governance and more broadly, the performance of corporate boards have traditional been measured using financial metrics. These financial metrics like Return on Investment (ROI), Return on Assets (ROA), Return on Equity (ROE), Earnings and Profitability Ratio (E and P) are ex-post measure of organizations wellbeing or lack thereof arising from corporate board activities. These financial metrics are, for all intents and purposes, self-serving and one-dimensional measure of corporate performance. They do not fully account for the other dimensions of organization responsibilities especially, the social, health and environmental benefits expected from organization’s activities. The COVID-19 and the changing organizational dynamics have made the case for corporate board’s performance to be assessed beyond the usual financial metrics. In this study, we provide a framework that accounts for the various dimensions of organization activities: finance, social and environmental; the so-called Triple-Bottom (TBL) approaches. A TBL-compliance metric was used to track the performance of selected manufacturing firms in Nigeria using a content analytical technique. The result of the analysis showed that majority of the firms performed remarkably well in areas of profitability and economic value creation but performed less satisfactorily in areas of social and environmental sustainability. On aggregate, the sampled firms committed less than 1 percent of their profit after tax on corporate social responsibility while less than 5 percent of the sampled firms scored above average on the TBL-adoption matrix. From the findings of the study we can conclude that manufacturing firms in Nigeria are yet to be fully committed to social and environmental sustainability. The study recommended for a regulatory re-jig away from the usual mandatory declaration of commitment to concrete actions based on measurable indicators on social and environmental sustainability compliance.
