Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment

The desktop study is on poverty and underdevelopment, which continues to be a matter of concern in the developing world. According to Chen and Ravallion (2008), about 1.4 billion people (one in four) lived on less than $1.25 a day in 2005. The above situation is likely to worsen in Africa where gove...

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Main Author: Matunhu, Jephias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ZOU Publications 2016
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Online Access:http://www.lis.zou.ac.zw:8080/dspace/handle/0/89
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1489
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author Matunhu, Jephias
author_facet Matunhu, Jephias
author_sort Matunhu, Jephias
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description The desktop study is on poverty and underdevelopment, which continues to be a matter of concern in the developing world. According to Chen and Ravallion (2008), about 1.4 billion people (one in four) lived on less than $1.25 a day in 2005. The above situation is likely to worsen in Africa where governments are failing to eradicate poverty alone. Giant transnational corporations (TNC) are increasingly called upon to champion poverty reduction in the continent. Notably, of the world’s 100 largest economic entities, 51 are giant TNCs and the world’s 200 largest corporations have combined sales that are greater than the combined GDP of all countries in the world. This desktop research assumes that bodies corporate are the key institutions for eradicating poverty in Africa; and so are called upon to make a significant contribution to the society that they operate in and depend upon for their economic and financial might. More specifically, this paper examines the role of giant TNCs in poverty reduction in a continent that has high poverty levels but endowed with plentiful resources.
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spelling ir-11408-14892022-06-27T13:49:06Z Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment Matunhu, Jephias Africa, corporate social responsibility, poverty, transnational corporations, giant The desktop study is on poverty and underdevelopment, which continues to be a matter of concern in the developing world. According to Chen and Ravallion (2008), about 1.4 billion people (one in four) lived on less than $1.25 a day in 2005. The above situation is likely to worsen in Africa where governments are failing to eradicate poverty alone. Giant transnational corporations (TNC) are increasingly called upon to champion poverty reduction in the continent. Notably, of the world’s 100 largest economic entities, 51 are giant TNCs and the world’s 200 largest corporations have combined sales that are greater than the combined GDP of all countries in the world. This desktop research assumes that bodies corporate are the key institutions for eradicating poverty in Africa; and so are called upon to make a significant contribution to the society that they operate in and depend upon for their economic and financial might. More specifically, this paper examines the role of giant TNCs in poverty reduction in a continent that has high poverty levels but endowed with plentiful resources. 2016-05-27T09:16:07Z 2016-05-27T09:16:07Z 2011 Article http://www.lis.zou.ac.zw:8080/dspace/handle/0/89 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1489 en Zimbabwe International Journal of Open & Distance Learning;Vol. 1 No. 2; p. 84-94 open ZOU Publications
spellingShingle Africa, corporate social responsibility, poverty, transnational corporations, giant
Matunhu, Jephias
Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment
title Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment
title_full Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment
title_fullStr Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment
title_full_unstemmed Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment
title_short Poverty and corporate social responsibility in Africa: a critical assessment
title_sort poverty and corporate social responsibility in africa: a critical assessment
topic Africa, corporate social responsibility, poverty, transnational corporations, giant
url http://www.lis.zou.ac.zw:8080/dspace/handle/0/89
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1489
work_keys_str_mv AT matunhujephias povertyandcorporatesocialresponsibilityinafricaacriticalassessment