ASSESSMENT OF THE IMPACT OF POVERTY ON THE NIGERIAN ECONOMY
ABSTRACT:
This research study by means of robust
statistical analysis investigated the poverty situation in Nigeria and
how it affects the citizens and the economy at large. This research was
taken in a period of 25 years which is from 1985 – 2010. The ordinary
least square method was used to investigate this work. The empirical analysis carried out showed that the Nigerian economy has
changed from a diversified economy to a mono economy because of the over
dependence of the oil sector and this has resulted to the increase of
poverty in Nigeria Using the ordinary least square regression we see
that there is a positive relationship between the per capital income and
the GDP of the country, positive relationship between government
expenditure on health and GDP but a negative relationship between
government expenditure on education and unemployment and the GDP of the
country. The Nigerian government in curbing this problem of poverty has
introduced many poverty alleviation policies and programmes but they
have all been a failure because the implementation of these policies did
not take into cognizance the masses that they are doing these policies
for.
CHAPTER ONE
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Poverty has many aspects of perception.
Some people or most people take poverty as deprivation and deficiency.
But poverty is a phenomenon which has historical, social, psychological,
cultural and international dimension, these means that poverty’s
definition depends on the angle the person looking at it looks at it.
As there are variations in the living
standard of people round the world the same way the economic growth
rates vary from one nation to another. Some countries are poor; some are
fairly well off while others are rich. However as everything is
relative so is poverty, what most people in the united states today see
as stark poverty would be seen as luxury in some parts of Asia and
Africa.
The key variables by which the poor can
be singled out are: food, income, health, freedom, justice, equity etc.
And all these variables mentioned above are the key challenges facing
our beloved country Nigeria today. But the key challenge facing Nigeria
and other developing countries is how the country can sustainably feed
her population and Nigeria’s population is over 140 million people.
Although Nigeria has one of the world’s
biggest economic growth rate ( averaging 7.4% over the last decade) and
also blessed with plenty of natural resources such as oil, but still it
retains a high level of poverty with 63% living below $1 daily. When one
talks about poverty in Nigeria it knows no bound as it is visible in
all aspects and segments of the society. Poverty is not just limited in
the rural areas it is also evident in the urban areas slums in the
country.
As said earlier poverty is relative and
also physical. It is physical because one can note its effects on the
people that are affected by poverty and it is relative because what is
regarded as poverty in some nations can be seen in other nations as
luxury.
The poor are those that have limited and
insufficient food, poor clothing, live in crowded and dirty shelter
(Galbraith 1995), cannot afford medical care and recreations, cannot
meet family and community obligations and other necessities of life.
When we come home there is no precise definition or explanation needed
for an individual to know what poverty is, as many people cannot afford
decent food ,medical care, recreation, decent shelter and clothing meet
up with family obligations etc, no wonder poverties is regarded as a
form of oppression (UNDP conference Report,15-17 March 2011).
Poverty means more than been
impoverished and more than just lacking financial means, it is an
overall condition of inadequacy, lack and scarcity, deficiency of
economic, political and social resources. These are a broader
perspective of poverties which reflects its true dimensions. Therefore
someone can be said to be in poverties if the person’s income and
resources (material, cultural and social) are so inadequate as to
exclude them from having a standard of living which is regarded as
acceptable by the society generally.
Poverty is not a respecter of creed,
race or educated and uneducated, it affects all when it strikes. Nigeria
is a country that enjoys the bountiful environment of nature and yet
cannot appropriate the natural resources to its advantage. It is greatly
ironic that at the last two decades Nigeria has received over $300
billion on oil and gas revenue and at the same time the population of
the critically poor has been doubled. Nigeria has been described as a
paradox by the World Bank (1996) in the sense that the poverties level
in Nigeria contradicts the country’s immense wealth. Nigeria
retrogressed into been one of the 25 poorest countries at the threshold
of the 21st century whereas she was among the richest 50 in the early
1970s.
The big question is what are the causes
of this poverty despite the country’s immense wealth and natural
resources? The shift in emphasis from agriculture to oil exploration in
the early 70’s is one of the causes. These shift transformed the
country’s economy to a mono economy making us to abandon other sectors
that give us revenue like agriculture.
The fact that the resources generated by
oil are not been invested in the non oil part of the economy of which
90% of Nigerians depend on for their livelihood is another issue. It has
been estimated that more than 80% of all poor live in the rural areas
of which 92% of them live in absolute poverties. And these poor people
in the rural areas are mostly into our abandoned agriculture, they are
usually small scaled.
Many administrations have tried
eradicating poverty in the wrong way, most administration think that by
enhancing growth and development of the cities that it would
subsequently promote the development of the rural communities by way of
“trickledown effect’’ but these rather created a wide gap between the
people in the cities and those in the villages. The villages became
disadvantaged, isolated, dull as the youth and able bodied men left the
village to escape the rural drudgery and also search for white collar
jobs.
Nigeria has in its own way tried to
eradicate poverties through many poverty alleviation programmes which
were geared towards reduction of poverties in the country. The poverty
alleviation and development plan started in year 1994, the structural
adjustment programme of 1986, the national accelerated food production
project, the poverty alleviation programme of early 2000 which looked at
employment and crime wave among the youths, the operation feed the
nation of 1976, USAID of 1975 but so far all these programmes have
failed to obtain their objective which is reduction of poverties.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
The problem of poverty in Nigeria is not
to be entirely blamed on lack of sufficient resources but also on the
allocation and management of these resources that are available for use.
Despite the fact that monetary measures
is simple studies have shown that these measures are deficient
(Revallion 1996). Revallion argues that poverty is multi faceted;
therefore multi indicators are necessary including measures of real
expenditure per adult access to non market goods like health and
education. Hence for effective poverty measurement there is needed to go
beyond money metric measures. It is necessary to employ multi
dimensional approach in which expenditure on market goods is placed side
by side with “non income goods’’ and indicators of intra household
distribution. These will help us to understand the causes of poverties
more so that better policies that can fight poverty can be formulated.
1.3 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The objectives of the study are to evaluate the performances of the Nigerian economy. Specifically the study tends to examine
- How the Nigerian economy had fared in the poverty trend
- The effect of poverty on output.
1.4 HYPOTHESIS
- There is no positive trend of poverty in Nigeria
- There is no effect of poverty on output in Nigeria
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
The study attempts to put together the
poverty cases in the Nigeria economy and its effects on the
people. This study should serve as a document for those with power
strong enough to influence anti – poverty policies. It should be
regarded as a guide to policy matters in our country Nigeria and other
third world countries.
1.6 SCOPE AND LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
The scope of this study is to analyze
the Nigerian economy on poverty. This duty is limited to the Nigerian
economy for the period of 1986 -2010.
CHAPTER TWO
THEORETICAL LITERATURE
The answer to the effects of poverty has
been the key research of many economists in the world. This was because
while some countries had maintained a continuous growth others were
falling or stagnating. The degree, intensity, severity of poverty is
referred to as the degree of impact of poverties on a given population.
When you look at the Nigerian economy the problem of poverty has been a
long time cause of concern to the past and present governments.
Governments focused on structural developments, town and country
planning as a practical means of dealing with the problem. Some poverty
policies and programs have been put in place by the government as a way
of curtailing poverty. In a fairly recent survey Nigeria poverties
profile was described as wide spread and severs. Nigeria’s basic social
indicators now place her as one of the 25 poorest countries in the
world.
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