This edited volume provides a critical evaluation of financing options for sustainable development in Africa. While sustainability has long been the watchword for development programs, and while many African countries have taken initiatives to develop integrated frameworks that tackle developmental challengesincluding poverty, education, and healthfinancing has remained a challenge. In this book, an expert team of chapter authors examines new financing options while also exploring how traditional financing means, such as foreign aid and foreign direct investment, can be more effective for sustainability. The authors discuss how African nations can build adequate structures and productive capacity to create a platform that can meet present economic, social, and environmental needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Practical case studies and scientific evidence give this book a unique approach that is both qualitative and quantitative. This book will be of interest to students, practitioners, and scholars of development studies, public policy and African economics.
1. Introduction; Asongu Simplice
Part I Financing in Africa for Sustainable Development
2. Financing Mechanisms African Governments Should Pursue in Financing Sustainable Development in the Next 20 Years; Nomahlubi Nkume
3. Financial Inclusion and Foreign Market Participation of Firms: A Quasi-experiment from Nigeria; Efobi Uchenna, Orkoh Emmanuel, and Atata Scholastica
4. Business Regulations and Foreign Direct Investment in Sub-Saharan Africa: Implications for Regulatory Reform; Ben Katoka and Huck-ju Kwon
5. Broadening Financial Intermediation in Sub-Saharan Africa; Murat Y?lek and Vivien Yeda
6. Institutions, Fisls(