Department of Business Administration
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://repository.nileuniversity.edu.ng/handle/123456789/91
Browse
Search Results
Item The Contribution Of Foreign Aid To The Reduction Of Poverty In Developing Nations?(International Journal of Social Sciences, 2019-02-02) Nkoyo Ekere; Maitala FaizaPurpose: This paper seeks to examine the impact of foreign aid in poverty reduction in developing nations. It reviews the positive and negative impacts of aid in lessening poverty in evolving countries and the critical success factors that could serve as a blueprint for developing nations to adopt. Methodology/Approach: The paper employs a critical review of extant scholarship, where empirical evidences on the positive and negative effect of foreign aid carried out from various countries were provided to support the claims of the studies. Findings: The findings give insight into the viability of aid and identified some key critical success factors which comprised of good governance, recipient domestic policies, stringent conditionality of aid and interest of donor countries. Research Implication: This paper provides a blueprint for critical success factors necessary for aid to be an effective tool for lessening poverty in the growing nations. Originality/Value: This paper contributes to the existing article on the efficacy of aid in poverty reduction. It examines the positive and negative impacts of aid and identifies the critical success factors and propose these must be in place to enable growing countries reap the benefits of aid.Item Investigating the Impact of Entrepreneurial Infrastructure Deficit on Firm Growth(International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Business Development, 2019-02-02) Usman Baba Isah; Zubairu Umaru Mustapha; Mohammed Dokochi; Jaafar Umar; Maitala FaizaPurpose: This study therefore aims to investigate the impact of EI deficit on firm growth, focusing on the growth of SMEs in Nigeria. Design/methodology/approach: the methods of data collection adopted by the studies (interview, questionnaire and observation Findings: Empirical findings revealed that the availability of physical infrastructure (constant water supply and good road infrastructure) and the non-physical infrastructure (electricity, government policies/programmes, access to financial support services, incubation centers/platforms, business clusters and entrepreneurship training) improves productivity, profitability, sales, number of customers and consistent growth rate of SMEs. Research limitations/implications: This was done through a critical review of extant literature (peer reviewed journal articles) on EI which were obtained from reputable data bases and broken down into two basic components of infrastructure (physical and non-physical infrastructure). Practical implications: The study recommends that government should use fiscal policies to address the economic challenges of SMEs and also invest in the provision of EI facilities to facilitate the growth and development of SMEs in NigeriaItem Assessing the Impact of Entrepreneurship Education on the Entrepreneurial Intention of Nigerian Entrepreneurship Students(Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, 2019-02-02) Owoyemi Amuda; Umaru Zubairu; Bello Ibrahim; Maitala FaizaThis study investigated the impact of entrepreneurship education on the entrepreneurial intentions (EI) of students enrolled at the Department of Entrepreneurship and Business Studies located in the Federal University of Technology Minna, Nigeria. It employed a cross-section survey design using a questionnaire adapted from Turker & Selcuk (2009). A comparison of the mean EI scores of 82 final-year and 68 second year students revealed that there was no significant difference in entrepreneurial intentions between the two groups of students. This implied that the curriculum of the department needed to be revised, and that a policy of mandating entrepreneurship education at the university level was insufficient to address the alarming youth unemployment problem in Nigeria.Item A Systematic Review Of Cryptocurrency Scholarship(International Journal of Commerce and Finance, 2019-02-02) Isaiah Adeleke; Umaru Mustapha Zubairu; Bilkisu Abubakar; Maitala Faiza; Yakubu Mustapha; Ekanem EdiukuPurpose – The purpose of this paper was to conduct a systemic review of extant cryptocurrency research in order to identify important features of these studies and to provide directions for future cryptocurrency research. Methodology - The Systematic Quantitative Assessment Technique (SQAT) was used to identify and review relevant peer-reviewed journal articles that investigated various facets of cryptocurrency. Findings – 54 journal articles were identified from 12 high-quality databases. The findings of the review revealed that most of the studies took place in Europe, North America and Asia, while Africa has been largely ignored. The main focus of cryptocurrency articles has been on a call for regulation of cryptocurrency without much work done on how to mitigate its vulnerability to the financing of terrorism and as a tool for money laundering. Finally, most cryptocurrency articles adopted a single research method – survey. There is a need for future studies to combine a variety of methods so as to gain additional insight into the issues of cryptocurrency’s vulnerability, risk identification and mitigation, regulation and acceptability. Research limitations - The use of limited but high quality academic databases means that some articles were not considered for this review. Originality/value – This study is one of the few studies to conduct a systematic review on a phenomenon which has the potential to transform the global financial landscape.