Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles

This research examines the role of Development Financing Institutions given the increasing scale of the development needs with the advent of the SDGs. It asks how DFIs should be reviewing their role, using Innovative Finance tools and bringing on board more private sector partners into Development t...

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Main Author: Ndlovu, Loyiso
Other Authors: Patton-Power, Aunnie
Format: Dissertation
Language:Eng
Published: Faculty of Commerce 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30580
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-305802020-10-06T05:10:59Z Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles Ndlovu, Loyiso Patton-Power, Aunnie This research examines the role of Development Financing Institutions given the increasing scale of the development needs with the advent of the SDGs. It asks how DFIs should be reviewing their role, using Innovative Finance tools and bringing on board more private sector partners into Development to achieve greater development outcomes. This qualitative study examines 82 DFIs across the African continent using secondary data from surveys and speeches referencing Innovative Finance for DFIs. The research theory is developed by applying Grounded Theory in order to develop a theory which can be used to frame the logic for increasing engagements with private sector partners. Bottom-up secondary data is utilised to develop a DFI Engagement model for making strategic choices on private sector partnerships. The data was coded for analysis with eight different coding frames for the development of data categories to inform the key themes that support the theory. The results showed that generally DFIs across the African continent are potentially missing out on opportunities for greater development through lack of external engagement in particular private sector. In addition, their use of Innovative Finance tools is limited by awareness and technical capability. The research proposes how best the private sector should be engaged through the engagement framework, and recommends potential new roles for DFIs to play in this rapidly changing landscape. Lastly recommendations are made on further areas of work for the DFI fraternity to institutionalise such recommendations. 2019-10-16T07:23:47Z 2019-10-16T07:23:47Z 2019 2019-10-16T07:13:18Z Master Thesis Masters MCom (Development Finance) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30580 Eng application/pdf Faculty of Commerce Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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language Eng
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
description This research examines the role of Development Financing Institutions given the increasing scale of the development needs with the advent of the SDGs. It asks how DFIs should be reviewing their role, using Innovative Finance tools and bringing on board more private sector partners into Development to achieve greater development outcomes. This qualitative study examines 82 DFIs across the African continent using secondary data from surveys and speeches referencing Innovative Finance for DFIs. The research theory is developed by applying Grounded Theory in order to develop a theory which can be used to frame the logic for increasing engagements with private sector partners. Bottom-up secondary data is utilised to develop a DFI Engagement model for making strategic choices on private sector partnerships. The data was coded for analysis with eight different coding frames for the development of data categories to inform the key themes that support the theory. The results showed that generally DFIs across the African continent are potentially missing out on opportunities for greater development through lack of external engagement in particular private sector. In addition, their use of Innovative Finance tools is limited by awareness and technical capability. The research proposes how best the private sector should be engaged through the engagement framework, and recommends potential new roles for DFIs to play in this rapidly changing landscape. Lastly recommendations are made on further areas of work for the DFI fraternity to institutionalise such recommendations.
author2 Patton-Power, Aunnie
author_facet Patton-Power, Aunnie
Ndlovu, Loyiso
author Ndlovu, Loyiso
spellingShingle Ndlovu, Loyiso
Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles
author_sort Ndlovu, Loyiso
title Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles
title_short Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles
title_full Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles
title_fullStr Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles
title_full_unstemmed Increasing the Role of Private Sector in Development Opportunities in Africa using Innovative Finance Principles
title_sort increasing the role of private sector in development opportunities in africa using innovative finance principles
publisher Faculty of Commerce
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30580
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