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Purpose

This study aims to identify and analyze the barriers hindering the effective implementation of the Nigeria Startup Act (2022) and to determine the causal relationships among them to provide actionable insights for policymakers.

Design/methodology/approach

The study uses a fuzzy Decision-Making Trial and Evaluation Laboratory (fuzzy DEMATEL) methodology. Data was collected from ten experts within the Nigerian innovation policy and startup ecosystem through a pairwise comparison questionnaire. The experts evaluated the influence of ten pre-identified barriers, which were subsequently analyzed using fuzzy set theory to map a cause–effect network.

Findings

The analysis identifies four key barriers as causal factors that drive the system: insufficient funding, bureaucratic bottlenecks, policy incoherence and low awareness of the Act. These root causes significantly influence six dependent barriers: lack of inter-agency coordination, inadequate technical capacity, low stakeholder engagement, resistance to change, data scarcity and limited monitoring and evaluation systems. Bureaucratic bottlenecks were found to be the most central and influential barrier within the network.

Originality/value

This study is among the first to apply the fuzzy DEMATEL method to analyze innovation policy implementation in Africa. It moves beyond descriptive barrier identification to provide an empirical model of their causal interdependencies, offering a novel and strategic perspective for overcoming the design-implementation gap in developing economies.

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