Abstract
Following the 1980 Berg Report, and the injection of “political conditionalities” by the
Bretton Woods Institutions (BWI), in particular the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the
World Bank (WB) in their financial relationships with the developing countries, the intellectual
issue of how best to attract and stimulate foreign direct investments (FDI) became subsumed
within the great debate ignited by the famous Report. As the debate raged on, there was the lack of
specific focus on the determination of both the theoretical and empirical relationships, or the
validation of the assumed theoretical and empirical relationships between the “new additionalities”
and/or “political conditionalities” as postulated and propounded by the BWI and their intellectual
hangers-on on the one hand, and the stimulation of FDI on the other. The lack of focus on the
theoretical and empirical relationships obviously reveals the fact that perhaps certain preconditions
are important for FDI to be stimulated and as well attracted on a permanent basis.
Against the above background, the study concerned itself with what the preconditions are,
and whether they were necessarily competitive politics, free press, tax incentives, good
infrastructure, favourable investment laws, among others, as the Babangida administration
implemented the combined, inseparable programmes of political transition and economic
adjustment between 1985 and 1993 in Nigeria. While the data sources adopted by the study were
rooted in the established traditions of broad qualitative research methodology through an intensive
survey of the avalanche of materials on FDI in Nigeria in Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Reports,
the technique of data analysis was patterned along the historical and analytical method of
developmentalism, a perspective to scholarship that emphasizes history not as narrative events but
as explanatory factor and/or force shaping and determining development and its processes.
Tajudeen, S (2021). Preconditions for Foreign Direct Investments Stimulation: The Nigerian Experience, 1985 – 1993. Afribary. Retrieved from https://tracking.afribary.com/works/preconditions-for-foreign-direct-investments-stimulation-the-nigerian-experience-1985-1993
Tajudeen, SALAMI "Preconditions for Foreign Direct Investments Stimulation: The Nigerian Experience, 1985 – 1993" Afribary. Afribary, 01 May. 2021, https://tracking.afribary.com/works/preconditions-for-foreign-direct-investments-stimulation-the-nigerian-experience-1985-1993. Accessed 23 Nov. 2024.
Tajudeen, SALAMI . "Preconditions for Foreign Direct Investments Stimulation: The Nigerian Experience, 1985 – 1993". Afribary, Afribary, 01 May. 2021. Web. 23 Nov. 2024. < https://tracking.afribary.com/works/preconditions-for-foreign-direct-investments-stimulation-the-nigerian-experience-1985-1993 >.
Tajudeen, SALAMI . "Preconditions for Foreign Direct Investments Stimulation: The Nigerian Experience, 1985 – 1993" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 23, 2024. https://tracking.afribary.com/works/preconditions-for-foreign-direct-investments-stimulation-the-nigerian-experience-1985-1993