The impact of Аfrican continental free trade agreement (AFCFTA) implementation on small and medium business in Nigeria

Authors

DOI:

10.26577/be156220266

Abstract

The study assessed the impact of the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) on Nigerian SMEs. Three goals and research agendas have been formulated to guide the research. The free trade theory proposed by David Ricardo, Adams Smith, and David Hume (1971) has been used to relate the impact of his AfCTA on small and medium enterprises in Nigeria. The study used a descriptive survey design of 1,766 SMEs registered on the Lagos State Chamber of Commerce platform. Using random sampling, I selected a sample size of 400 respondents (400) from the study area. A thirteen-item (13) structured questionnaire was used to collect data from the respondents. Completed specimens of instruments were pooled and analyzed using the mean and standard deviation. The result among other things states that reduced cost of material and inputs, increase production capacity, reduction in the prices of goods and services and reductions in the cost of machinery are the positive impacts of AfCFTA implementation on SMEs in Nigeria and increase foreign competition with local goods reduction in the demand of goods and services of local goods, and cheaper goods compete with local products. neglect of other important factors affecting SMEs and the promotion of substandard products and dumping is the perceived threat of AfCFTA implementation on SMEs in Nigeria. The study thus recommended that individuals and SMEs in Nigeria should look inwards and try to change the mindset of patronizing products and services from non-African countries and that respective Governments including Nigeria should see to it that policies geared towards effective implementation of the trade agreement should not just be formulated but also be set in motion. 

Keywords: AfCFTA, SMEs, Nigeria, international trade, economic development.

Author Biographies

  • Prof Ravinder Rena, Durban University of Technology, Durban, Republic of South Africa,

    Professor in Economics with over 34 years of teaching and research experience across Asia-Pacific, Africa, and Europe. He is currently Professor of Economics at Department of Public Management, Law and Economics, Faculty of Management Sciences, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, and serves as Adjunct Professor at Monarch Business School, Switzerland, with visiting professorships in multiple countries. He has contributed extensively to global academic forums, including BRICS research platforms. Prof. Rena has published over 200 peer-reviewed journal articles and 80 book chapters. He has delivered keynote talks at more than 400 international conferences. His research focuses on Development Economics, Economics of Education, Public Policy, Inclusive Growth, Globalisation, SMMEs, Microfinance, and Rural Entrepreneurship. His Google Scholar profile records 2100+ citations, with an h-index of 26 and i10-index of 62 (Durban, Republic of South Africa, email: ravinder.rena@gmail.com).

  • Mr George Emmanuel Deinma, Rivers State University, Port Harcourt, Nigeria

    He is a postgraduate affiliated to the Department of Political Science, Faculty of Social Sciences, Rivers State University, Port Harcourt, Nigeria. He is involved in number humanitarian especially youth motivation and women empowerment programs in Nigeria. Mr George's research interest is in Traditional Conflict Management Strategies, Maritime Security in the Niger -Delta Region, Nuclear threats in the Baltics Region, Cyber Security threats in Nigeria, and the Proliferation of Small arms and light weapons (Port Harcourt, Nigeria, email:ravinder.rena@gmail.com).

Published

2026-06-20

How to Cite

The impact of Аfrican continental free trade agreement (AFCFTA) implementation on small and medium business in Nigeria. (2026). Journal of Economic Research & Business Administration, 156(2). https://doi.org/10.26577/be156220266