As the world jostle for improved manufacturing and industrial technologies, third world countries in Africa, especially Nigeria still battles with the use of primitive tools in a technologically advancing world. This industrial bias in the country has led to abject poverty among the citizens, coupled with increasing tendencies of starvation, terrorism, banditry, kidnapping and youth unemployment being at 33% for the first quota of the year. To ameliorate this deficiencies and increase manufacturing sector performance in the economy, the government strives to achieve more foreign capital inflows in other to supplement the local production capacity. This study therefore aims to re-validate the implications this inflow has on local manufacturing sector in the country by re-assessing the implications of foreign capital inflows on manufacturing sector in third world countries: A Nigerian experience. Objectively the study is situated to examine the nexus between foreign portfolio investment, foreign direct investment and foreign development assistance with manufacturing sector productivity from 1981 to 2019, with statistical evidence obtained from central bank of Nigeria annual financial report for the year 2020. The study regressed for statistical stationarity of the variables using Augmented dickey and fuller test criterion, johansen test for cointegration to establish the nature of relationship between the parameter estimate in the model. Multiple regression analysis was carried out to substantiate the individual implications of the regressors on the regressed. Furthermore, the outcome of empirical evaluation is indicative of the existence of a short run relationship among the variables. It was likewise obtained that foreign direct investment (FDI) and exchange rate (EXCHR) were additively related to manufacturing sector productivity in Nigeria, while foreign portfolio investment (FPI) and interest rate (INTR) witnessed relative negative association ship with manufacturing productivity (MANU), which implies that a percent increase in the volume of foreign portfolio investment would equate 2.50% decline in local manufacturing capacity. The study recommended the adoption of endogenous growth model in Nigeria, while concluding based on theorization and argument against foreign capital inflows on its negative crowding out effect, it exerts on local industries in the country, that to achieve growth in the manufacturing sector, the country must evolve and begin a gradual industrial transition from primitive tools to the use of more advanced machines.
Published in | International Journal of Accounting, Finance and Risk Management (Volume 7, Issue 4) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11 |
Page(s) | 140-149 |
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Manufacturing Sectors, Umuahia, Nigeria
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APA Style
Henry Onyebuchi Ejelonu, Stanley Osinachi Okafor. (2022). Implications of Foreign Capital Inflows on Manufacturing Sector in Third World Countries: A Nigerian Experience. International Journal of Accounting, Finance and Risk Management, 7(4), 140-149. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11
ACS Style
Henry Onyebuchi Ejelonu; Stanley Osinachi Okafor. Implications of Foreign Capital Inflows on Manufacturing Sector in Third World Countries: A Nigerian Experience. Int. J. Account. Finance Risk Manag. 2022, 7(4), 140-149. doi: 10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11
@article{10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11, author = {Henry Onyebuchi Ejelonu and Stanley Osinachi Okafor}, title = {Implications of Foreign Capital Inflows on Manufacturing Sector in Third World Countries: A Nigerian Experience}, journal = {International Journal of Accounting, Finance and Risk Management}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {140-149}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijafrm.20220704.11}, abstract = {As the world jostle for improved manufacturing and industrial technologies, third world countries in Africa, especially Nigeria still battles with the use of primitive tools in a technologically advancing world. This industrial bias in the country has led to abject poverty among the citizens, coupled with increasing tendencies of starvation, terrorism, banditry, kidnapping and youth unemployment being at 33% for the first quota of the year. To ameliorate this deficiencies and increase manufacturing sector performance in the economy, the government strives to achieve more foreign capital inflows in other to supplement the local production capacity. This study therefore aims to re-validate the implications this inflow has on local manufacturing sector in the country by re-assessing the implications of foreign capital inflows on manufacturing sector in third world countries: A Nigerian experience. Objectively the study is situated to examine the nexus between foreign portfolio investment, foreign direct investment and foreign development assistance with manufacturing sector productivity from 1981 to 2019, with statistical evidence obtained from central bank of Nigeria annual financial report for the year 2020. The study regressed for statistical stationarity of the variables using Augmented dickey and fuller test criterion, johansen test for cointegration to establish the nature of relationship between the parameter estimate in the model. Multiple regression analysis was carried out to substantiate the individual implications of the regressors on the regressed. Furthermore, the outcome of empirical evaluation is indicative of the existence of a short run relationship among the variables. It was likewise obtained that foreign direct investment (FDI) and exchange rate (EXCHR) were additively related to manufacturing sector productivity in Nigeria, while foreign portfolio investment (FPI) and interest rate (INTR) witnessed relative negative association ship with manufacturing productivity (MANU), which implies that a percent increase in the volume of foreign portfolio investment would equate 2.50% decline in local manufacturing capacity. The study recommended the adoption of endogenous growth model in Nigeria, while concluding based on theorization and argument against foreign capital inflows on its negative crowding out effect, it exerts on local industries in the country, that to achieve growth in the manufacturing sector, the country must evolve and begin a gradual industrial transition from primitive tools to the use of more advanced machines.}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Implications of Foreign Capital Inflows on Manufacturing Sector in Third World Countries: A Nigerian Experience AU - Henry Onyebuchi Ejelonu AU - Stanley Osinachi Okafor Y1 - 2022/10/28 PY - 2022 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11 DO - 10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11 T2 - International Journal of Accounting, Finance and Risk Management JF - International Journal of Accounting, Finance and Risk Management JO - International Journal of Accounting, Finance and Risk Management SP - 140 EP - 149 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2578-9376 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijafrm.20220704.11 AB - As the world jostle for improved manufacturing and industrial technologies, third world countries in Africa, especially Nigeria still battles with the use of primitive tools in a technologically advancing world. This industrial bias in the country has led to abject poverty among the citizens, coupled with increasing tendencies of starvation, terrorism, banditry, kidnapping and youth unemployment being at 33% for the first quota of the year. To ameliorate this deficiencies and increase manufacturing sector performance in the economy, the government strives to achieve more foreign capital inflows in other to supplement the local production capacity. This study therefore aims to re-validate the implications this inflow has on local manufacturing sector in the country by re-assessing the implications of foreign capital inflows on manufacturing sector in third world countries: A Nigerian experience. Objectively the study is situated to examine the nexus between foreign portfolio investment, foreign direct investment and foreign development assistance with manufacturing sector productivity from 1981 to 2019, with statistical evidence obtained from central bank of Nigeria annual financial report for the year 2020. The study regressed for statistical stationarity of the variables using Augmented dickey and fuller test criterion, johansen test for cointegration to establish the nature of relationship between the parameter estimate in the model. Multiple regression analysis was carried out to substantiate the individual implications of the regressors on the regressed. Furthermore, the outcome of empirical evaluation is indicative of the existence of a short run relationship among the variables. It was likewise obtained that foreign direct investment (FDI) and exchange rate (EXCHR) were additively related to manufacturing sector productivity in Nigeria, while foreign portfolio investment (FPI) and interest rate (INTR) witnessed relative negative association ship with manufacturing productivity (MANU), which implies that a percent increase in the volume of foreign portfolio investment would equate 2.50% decline in local manufacturing capacity. The study recommended the adoption of endogenous growth model in Nigeria, while concluding based on theorization and argument against foreign capital inflows on its negative crowding out effect, it exerts on local industries in the country, that to achieve growth in the manufacturing sector, the country must evolve and begin a gradual industrial transition from primitive tools to the use of more advanced machines. VL - 7 IS - 4 ER -