Long-term Impact of FDI-Corruption Interaction on Domestic Investment in Nigeria
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Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Economic Alternatives
Abstract
Over the past three decades, Nigeria has
experienced unstable domestic investment
and foreign direct investment inflows, and the
country continues to face rising corruption
and related problems. An ARDL technique
has been adopted to explore the longterm
FDI’s impact on domestic investment
including evaluating if the FDI-domestic
investment nexus is dependent on the control
of corruption in Nigeria over this period. The
bounds test result shows an evidence of a
long-term relation amongst FDI, domestic
investment and corruption control (including
GDP per capita, lending rate, exchange rate
and oil price). We find that increasing inward
FDI reduces (crowd-out) domestic investment
and greater corruption control (lowering
corruption) leads to a higher domestic
investment in Nigeria over the long-term. Also, the influence of FDI on domestic investment
depends on (or varies with) the control of
corruption. FDI crowd-in domestic investment
at greater corruption control than at lesser
corruption control in the long-term. Other
significant long-term influencers of domestic
investment are the exchange rate and oil
price. Given these outcomes, the study offers
some recommendations to boost domestic
investment in Nigeria.
Description
Keywords
FDI, domestic investment, corruption, Nigeria