Abstract

Since Sub-Saharan Africa's first independence in Ghana, the region has experienced massive and costly political and bureaucratic corruption within public service and administration. The causes of the corruption, its nature and form are wide and intertwined. In Sub-Saharan Africa, efforts to curb corruption have failed to discard it. The paper focused on the period from Nkruma in Ghana to Mutharika the 2nd in Malawi. This paper reviewed existing literature on political and bureaucratic corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa while on the other hand the paper employed key informant interviews to gather the required data to investigate, analyse and profile the genesis and evolution of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa. The key informant interviews were employed to solicit public views and opinion from nineteen key informant participants (n=19) selected from 11 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The paper found that corruption is legendary; has entrenched itself to becoming some sort of culture in the region, and has become the most difficult socio-economic challenge to resolve in the region despite the various anti-corruption efforts employed by stakeholders to curb it. It emerged through the study that law-enforcement efforts against corruption need some reinforcement in order to be effective and eficient in uprooting corruption in the region. If Sub-Saharan Africa fails to address its corruption challenge, its development prospects would seriously curtailed.

Highlights

  • The main objective of this paper is to present a chronology of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa

  • This section diarises the chronology of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa starting from Africa's first post-liberation president Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana up to the region's latest and youngest president Peter Mutharika of Malawi

  • Instead corruption is fast rising to infinity (Rock and Bonnett, 2004) almost becoming contagious affecting every generation of political leaders and public service and administration bureaucrats in the region (Adebayo, 2013; Akindele, 2005; Gbenga, 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

The main objective of this paper is to present a chronology of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa. The over-arching aim of this paper is to highlight the fact that corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa is historical, legendary, persistent and evolutionary and has since been perpetrated and allowed to permeate through society mainly by the region's greedy political elites and bureaucrats. This view is corroborated by Enweremadu (2012) who posited that corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa – Nigeria in particular has been historical, having been incubated as far back as colonialism – and moved from one political dispensation to the other.

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