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Sub‐Saharan Africa's debt crisis: analysis and forecast based on Nigeria

Richard O. Omotoye (Department of Economics, Virginia State University, Petersburg, Virginia, USA)
Hari P. Sharma (Department of Accounting and Finance, Virginia State University, Petersburg, Virginia, USA)
Christopher Ngassam (Department of Accounting and Finance, Virginia State University, Petersburg, Virginia, USA)
Maxwell Eseonu (Department of Economics, Virginia State University, Petersburg, Virginia, USA)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 1 July 2006

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Abstract

Purpose

The paper sets out to focus the attention of scholars and policy‐makers on the urgency of Nigeria's worsening debt crisis, with a view to suggesting initiatives which can be instrumental in preventing a further deterioration of the crisis.

Design/methodology/approach

The recommendations suggested specifically addressed stated research objectives. The research framework attempted to evaluate the role played by Nigeria's past administrations in the evolvement of the crisis. It also appraised the crisis in the context of the new international environment surrounding it. The study suggested improvement to the methodological flaws inherent in modern‐day debt resolution framework, which, so far, has only undermined the implementation of past resolution initiatives at the practical level.

Findings

Among other findings, the study uncovered the following: without their modification to suit the peculiar needs and circumstances facing individual countries, modern‐day debt resolution initiatives will only continue to further impoverish Nigeria and sub‐Saharan Africa; over time, Nigeria's successive administrations‐through corruption and inconsistent administrative policies‐significantly contributed to the crisis; creditors establishments‐by knowingly favoring fraudulent administrations with huge, questionable loans (in their self‐serving interest to benefit from reverse resource transfer)‐in no small measure contributed to the crisis.

Research limitations/implications

The projections into the future are only based on trends observed in the past. They do not include unexpected events which might dramatically affect the course of the crisis in the long or distant future.

Practical implications

In order to ensure a successful implementation of resolution strategies suggested here and elsewhere, all the concerned parties will have to be actively involved‐both Nigeria and other indebted African countries, and all their external creditors.

Originality/value

Nigeria's external debt crisis was re‐appraised in the context of the new environment of the crisis. The findings and initiatives suggested for resolution here have a tremendous research value for scholars in the field. They also have an immense practical value for implementation by policy‐makers.

Keywords

Citation

Omotoye, R.O., Sharma, H.P., Ngassam, C. and Eseonu, M. (2006), "Sub‐Saharan Africa's debt crisis: analysis and forecast based on Nigeria", Managerial Finance, Vol. 32 No. 7, pp. 606-620. https://doi.org/10.1108/03074350610671593

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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