Financial crimes in Africa and economic growth: Implications for achieving sustainable development goals (SDGs)

Author:

Arthur Kingsley K.12ORCID,Asongu Simplice A.345ORCID,Darko Peter2,Ansah Marvin O.2,Adom Sampson2,Hlortu Omega2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agribusiness Management and Consumer Studies University of Energy and Natural Resources Sunyani Ghana

2. Peadato Groups: Peadato Group‐Peadato Research Services Kumasi Ghana

3. School of Economics University of Johannesburg Johannesburg South Africa

4. Department of Economics University of Tashkent for Applied Sciences Tashkent Uzbekistan

5. The Institute of Convergence Science Korea University Seoul South Korea

Abstract

AbstractThe current review systematically synthesizes existing literature to provide a comprehensive overview of the nature of financial crimes in Africa and their impact on economic growth. We adopted the PRISMA protocol to identify 128 papers from the Scopus database, which were analyzed using MS Excel, VOSviewer, and R‐packages (Bibliometrix). The survey reveals that financial crimes are on the rise in Africa and have gained increasing concern over the years on the part of scholars, governments, and NGOs. The survey also demonstrates that most of the financial crime in Africa emanates from illicit activities such as credit card fraud, cybercrime, mobile money fraud, financial statement fraud, Ponzi scheme, bribery and corruption, public fund mismanagement, terror financing, piracy, identity fraud, tax invasion, drug trafficking, product based‐fraud, burglary, trade‐based money laundering, sex marketing, and gambling; with the majority occurring in specific regions like Western Africa, Southern Africa, and Eastern Africa. Sociopolitical marginalization, poverty, and unemployment, weak institutional and financial regulatory systems and individual selfish interests were the major causes. Overall, the content analysis of the studies indicates that financial crimes have significant negative impacts on the economic growth of the African continent. Implications for future research and practices have been discussed.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference162 articles.

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