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The Effect of IFRS Adoption on Foreign Direct Investment in Africa

Mr Anyass, Ibrahim Anyass
Lecturer
  +233(0)249172293
  ianyass@uew.edu.gh

Authors
Musah, A., Adjei, E., & Ahmed, I
Publication Year
2020
Article Title
The Effect of IFRS Adoption on Foreign Direct Investment in Africa
Journal
Journal of Applied Accounting and Taxation
Volume
5
Issue Number
2
Page Numbers
117-126
ISSN
2548-9925
Abstract

Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) is supposed to help enhance comparability of financial statement, improve the quality of financial reporting and accounting information of businesses in a country. This is expected to help improve Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the adopting countries. This study examined the effect of IFRS adoption on FDI inflows in Africa. Unlike previous studies that sample both adopting and non-adopting countries, this study sampled only Africa countries that have adopted IFRS to determine whether the adoption has improved FDI inflows. To achieve this objective, 20 African countries that have adopted IFRS were sampled covering a period 1980 to 2015. Data was sourced from The World Bank financial and Economic Data. Control variables such as GDP growth, openness of the economy, government debt and population growth were included in the model. The correlation and regression analysis showed that IFRS adoption has a positive and significant influence on FDI inflows in Africa. On the other hand, open economy, government debt and population growth had a positive and significant association with FDI. Overall, the results show that African countries that want to improve FDI inflows must improve the quality of their reporting environment by adopting IFRS

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