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                <text>COVID-19 emergency income grant and food security in Namibia</text>
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Orkoh, E., Hasholo, E.N., Sackey, F.G., Asravor, R.K.</text>
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                <text>This paper evaluates the effects of the government's COVID-19 economic stimulus and relief package (emergency/one-off income grant of ND750) on household food security in Namibia during the period of the lockdown. The analysis reveals that a household that received the income grant ($42 equivalent) experienced about 11%−17% reduction in food insecurity compared to their non-recipient counterparts. We also found that the effect was relatively higher in female-headed households than in male-headed households. The positive effect is supported by a higher proportion (53%) of the beneficiary households who were satisfied with the policy. These findings underscore the need for the government of Namibia to institutionalise and sustain the income grant policy as a safety net and extend it to cover other vulnerable households in the post-pandemic. Such a programme should be gender-responsive and targeted at household heads who make decision over food consumption and other household arrangements for a bigger impact.</text>
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                <text>Routledge, Taylor &amp; Francis</text>
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                <text>Benefitting from alter resources: network diffusion and SME survival</text>
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                <text>This study examines the usefulness of alter resources for the survival of small and medium scale enterprises (SMEs) in Ghana. We utilize data from two rounds of poultry SME network surveys and accompanying SME attributes between 2014 and 2015. We focused on the resources that diffuse to SMEs from alters and the mechanism through which these resources diffuse. We observed that alter markets and technological resources are significant for the survival of SMEs in our sample. We also explored the effect of variations in alter resources along the lines of the type of resource being diffused and found that market resource spill overs have a positive effect while technological resource variations have a negative effect, but these do not rise to significance. Finally, we assessed the impact of the mechanism through which the resources are diffused and found that both direct and indirect tie mechanisms have a positive effect on survival but the effect of direct ties was higher than that of indirect ties.&#13;
&#13;
Cette étude examine l'utilité de modifier les ressources pour la survie des PME au Ghana. Nous utilisons les données de deux séries d'enquêtes sur le réseau de PME de volaille et accompagnant les attributs des PME entre 2014 et 2015. Nous nous sommes concentrés sur les ressources qui diffusent aux PME des altérations et le mécanisme par lequel ces ressources diffusent. Nous avons observé que les marchés et les ressources technologiques sont importants pour la survie des PME de notre échantillon. Nous avons également exploré l'effet des variations des ressources sur le modèle de la ressource diffusée et avons constaté que les retombées sur les ressources du marché ont un effet positif et les variations des ressources technologiques ont un effet négatif, mais elles n'ont pas de signification. Enfin, nous avons évalué l'impact du mécanisme par lequel les ressources sont diffusées et constaté que les mécanismes de liaison directe et indirecte ont un effet positif sur la survie, mais l'effet des liens directs était plus élevé que pour les liens indirects.</text>
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                <text>https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08276331.2018.1462620#d1e819</text>
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                <text>Factors influencing the perception and the willingness to take the COVID-19 vaccine among the working population in Ghana</text>
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                <text>Frank Gyimah Sackey, Richard Asravor, Christopher Lamptey</text>
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                <text>Purpose&#13;
The onset of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has led to loss of lives and jobs and other adverse effects on persons, families and businesses. With its frightening tendencies, it was a sigh of relief with the discovery of vaccines to mitigate its disastrous effects. However, participation in the vaccination exercise in Ghana has been slow and unencoraging. This paper sought to identify the factors that influence the perception and willingness of individuals to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.&#13;
Design/methodology/approach&#13;
For this study, structured questionnaires were administered to 1,350 respondents selected at random by way of purposive sampling from specific regions that were also randomly selected. Out of this sample, a total of 1,296 were found to be in useable form. The probit model estimation with marginal effects was used to determine both perception and willingness to take the COVID-19 …</text>
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                <text>Do petroleum price fluctuations under price deregulation cause business cycles in Ghana?</text>
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                <text>Sackey, F.G., Asravor, R.K., Orkoh, E., Ankrah, I.</text>
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                <text>In the context of volatilities in the international markets in recent times, studies regarding the complexities of oil price fluctuations have focussed on analysing the special fluctuation characteristics of oil prices in different historical perspectives. This study examines the extent to which petroleum price fluctuations under the petroleum price deregulation regime impact on business cycles in Ghana. The study uses the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model with a quarterly data spanning from the first quarter of 2005 to the fourth quarter of 2022. Our empirical results show that price stability impacts positively on economic growth, both in the short and the long run, while foreign direct investment also has a positive effect on economic growth in the short run. Again, we observe that increases in inflation rate and government petroleum revenue negatively affect economic growth both in the short and the long run. To the best of the authors’ belief and knowledge, the observations and recommendations made are consistent with theory and empirical studies and contribute immensely to the discussions about price asymmetry and business cycles. It also offers a nuanced perspective on how policy makers can enact policies that ensure efficient and effective deregulation and price stability.</text>
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                <text>Springer Nature</text>
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                <text>Marketing Communications in Emerging Economies, Volume II</text>
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                <text>Drawing on the expertise of multi-disciplinary scholars from emerging economies, this volume aims to share fascinating perspectives on marketing communications by discussing the shift in the power of public relations, and highlighting how the small and local use communication effectively to improve performance and shares useful lessons on how to communicate hope by responding to customer emotions during uncertainties. The book contains valuable lessons and insights on communicating corporate social responsibility, effective social media communication, enacting brand purpose through communication, and using aesthetics in point-of-purchase advertising to drive purchase intention. It is the first of its kind to highlight key conceptual issues and provide critical empirical evidence on marketing communications in and from emerging economies. Corporate executives, educators, students, policymakers and businesses would find this book a useful tool on marketing communication as it lays bare some important strategic and operational insights specific to emerging markets.</text>
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                <text>https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-81337-6</text>
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                <text>An economic valuation of the Bunso Eco-Park, Ghana: an application of travel cost method</text>
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                <text>Adu Kwaku, Damoah Eric, Ankomah, Buor Kwame, Benard Oppong-Kusi, Frank Gyimah Sackey</text>
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                <text>This research aims at [1] identifying the factors that influence visits to Bunso Eco-Park; [2] estimating the recreational demand function for the park; and [3] estimating visitors’ net benefit (consumer surplus) for embarking on an eco-park recreational trip to Bunso using a sample size of 440. Estimates indicate that the annual person value of the site is Gh¢ 191.06 ($ 22.29) translating into an annual economic value of Gh¢ 9,170,880 (US$ 1,070,114.35). There is an inverse relationship between the rate of visits and the travel cost. The positive intercept of the demand function indicates a normal demand curve for the Bunso Eco-Park. The variables of visitors’ family size, marital status, and years visitors have known the eco-park were not significant. Educational level, age, gender, and knowledge of alternative sites were found to be factors influencing the visitation to the Bunso Eco-Park. Further valuation of the non …&#13;
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                <text>Purpose&#13;
This study examines learner satisfaction and success as mechanisms through which online learning quality translates into learners’ continuous intentions of use by extending DeLone and McLean’s information system success model. It also examines the moderating effect of perceived supervisory support and learners’ self-regulation on online learning quality in Higher Education Institutions.&#13;
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Survey data were obtained from 540 students in both private and public higher institutions of learning in Ghana. The Partial Least Squares – Structural Equations Modelling (PLS-SEM) technique was used to test the hypothesised relationships.&#13;
Findings&#13;
The results revealed that system quality emerged as the single most important variable in the DeLone and McLean model, that influences learner success and satisfaction. Further, learner satisfaction has a significant positive effect on …</text>
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                <text>A conceptual framework on finding the nexus between sustainability and desired outcomes for smart cities–the moderating role of green leadership</text>
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This paper aims to focus on the nexus between sustainability and desired outcomes for smart cities. The main focus is on how green leadership influences the relationship between smart and sustainable activities and stakeholder management.&#13;
Design/methodology/approach&#13;
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Findings&#13;
The findings indicate that smart cities and their sustainability activities can drive desired outcomes through green leadership. Also, green leadership has an indirect relationship with the desired outcomes of smart cities; hence, managers in the tourism and hospitality industries should cultivate their green leadership style to assist smart cities in accomplishing their goals.&#13;
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This research is conceptual, and the proposed model will need to be evaluated to be more valid …</text>
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                <text>Promoting carbon neutrality in China: do financial development, foreign direct investment, and industrialization play a material role?</text>
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                <text>Jun Yan, Kaodui Li, Mohammed Musah, Lijuan Zhang, Yutong Zhou, Dan Gao, Joseph Akwasi Nkyi, Frank Gyimah Sackey, Emmanuel Attah Kumah, Siqi Cao, Linnan Yao</text>
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                <text>One of the crucial issues confronting China is high carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Despite the numerous measures outlined to promote the country’s carbon neutrality target, CO2 emissions in the nation continue to increase. This means that more policy options are needed to help improve environmental sustainability (ES) in the nation. Hence, examining the relationship between financial development (FD), foreign direct investment, industrialization, and environmental sustainability in China to provide proper recommendations to drive the carbon neutrality agenda of the nation is deemed fitting. In attaining this goal, time-series data from the period 1990 to 2018 is employed. According to the results, foreign direct investment deteriorates environmental sustainability by promoting more CO2 emissions. This validates the pollution haven hypothesis (PHH). In addition, industrialization and financial development are not friendly to the nation’s environmental quality. Furthermore, economic growth and urbanization escalate environmental pollution in the nation. In addition, the interactions between financial development and foreign direct investment and between financial development and industrialization deteriorate the environment in China. Moreover, foreign direct investment and financial development have an inverted U-shaped association with environmental degradation, but industrialization and environmental pollution are not nonlinearly related. The study advocated for the implementation of measures that could help advance the carbon-neutrality targets of the nation.</text>
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                <text>Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Practices of Foreign and Local Companies in Ghana</text>
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                <text>Robert Ebo Hinson</text>
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                <text>This article reports a comparative study of the key motives underlying corporate social responsibility&#13;
(CSR) practices of foreign and local firms operating in Ghana and the societal as well as business&#13;
outcomes of these practices. The results show that while the CSR decisions of foreign firms are mainly&#13;
guided by legal prescriptions, those of their local counterparts are guided mostly by discretionary&#13;
and social considerations. The socially oriented CSR practices of the local firms are consistent with&#13;
cultural expectations in Ghana that those with extra resources should support the less privileged&#13;
members of the society. But the difference in the degree of importance that the two groups of firms attach to discretionary motives for their CSR practices is not statistically significant. The article also discusses the policy, strategy, and research implications of the findings. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</text>
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                <text>Published online in Wiley Online Libra</text>
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