Abstract
This study examined the intricate relationship between religious institutional presence and public resource allocation in postcolonial Africa, with particular reference to Uganda, Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, and Senegal over the period 2010– 2024. Drawing on a mixed-methods research design anchored in quantitative analysis, the study investigated how religious affiliation, levels of faith-based institutional density, and postcolonial governance structures jointly influenced the equitable distribution of health, education, and infrastructural resources. A stratified random sample of 1,240 households and 96 community leaders across five countries was analysed using univariate descriptive statistics, bivariate correlation and cross-tabulation, and Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) to establish direct, indirect, and mediated pathways. The SEM results revealed that religious institutional density exerted a statistically significant positive direct effect on community-level resource access (β = 0.43, p < 0.001), while postcolonial governance fragility moderated this relationship negatively (β = −0.29, p < 0.01). Bivariate analysis confirmed significant correlations between dominant religious affiliation and priority resource sectors (r = 0.38, p < 0.05), with communities dominated by faith-based service providers reporting higher perceived equity in education and health delivery but lower participation in state-managed redistributive programmes. Univariate findings revealed that 67.4% of respondents identified religion as a primary driver of community resource decisions, while only 31.2% reported full confidence in government resource allocation systems. The study concluded that religion constitutes both a developmental asset and a structural barrier to equitable postcolonial governance, depending on the degree of state-faith institutional complementarity. Recommendations included the formalisation of state-faith partnerships, the integration of religious actors into national development planning frameworks, and the strengthening of accountability mechanisms within faith-based service delivery systems.
Keywords
Religion, Resource Allocation, Postcolonial Africa, Faith-Based Organizations, Structural Equation Modelling, Development, Governance