TY - JOUR
T1 - Firms' sustainable and responsible innovation in Nigeria
T2 - Does informality play a role?
AU - Gasmi, Farid
AU - Kouakou, Dorgyles C.M.
AU - Sanni, Maruf
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - At the turn of the millennium, developing countries face a twofold challenge. First, for reasons related to both intra- and inter-generational justice, these countries need to follow sustainable development pathways. Second, they need to understand the deep principles underpinning informality, which is by now recognized as a structuring phenomenon of their economies. This paper sheds light on the relationship between these two goals by investigating how a Nigerian firm being formal versus informal affects its sustainable and responsible innovation (S&RI) activity. Using the entropy balancing methodology to analyze a novel database extracted from the Nigerian Business Innovation Surveys, we find that registered Nigerian firms engage in S&RI much more than those that are not. This suggests that, from the perspective of sustainable development, there should be no hiatus between recognizing the important role of the informal sector in the economy and promoting policies that give firms incentives to exit from it. By encouraging the registration of firms operating informally, these policies should help Nigeria in its transition to a sustainable market economy.
AB - At the turn of the millennium, developing countries face a twofold challenge. First, for reasons related to both intra- and inter-generational justice, these countries need to follow sustainable development pathways. Second, they need to understand the deep principles underpinning informality, which is by now recognized as a structuring phenomenon of their economies. This paper sheds light on the relationship between these two goals by investigating how a Nigerian firm being formal versus informal affects its sustainable and responsible innovation (S&RI) activity. Using the entropy balancing methodology to analyze a novel database extracted from the Nigerian Business Innovation Surveys, we find that registered Nigerian firms engage in S&RI much more than those that are not. This suggests that, from the perspective of sustainable development, there should be no hiatus between recognizing the important role of the informal sector in the economy and promoting policies that give firms incentives to exit from it. By encouraging the registration of firms operating informally, these policies should help Nigeria in its transition to a sustainable market economy.
KW - Nigeria
KW - informality
KW - institutional change
KW - sustainable and responsible innovation
KW - transition
U2 - 10.1111/ecot.12426
DO - 10.1111/ecot.12426
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85193915475
SN - 2577-6975
VL - 33
SP - 139
EP - 164
JO - Economics of Transition and Institutional Change
JF - Economics of Transition and Institutional Change
IS - 1
ER -