IMPACT OF GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE ON NIGERIAN ECONOMIC GROWTH (1981 – 2010)
ABSTRACT
The work
was on the impact of Government Expenditure on Nigeria Growth (1981 –
2010) dealing with secondary data from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
and the National Bureau of Statistics Regression Analysis with (OLS)
technique was used. Our findings indicate that there is a positive
correlation between Inflation, Money Supply, Government Consumption
Expenditure. While Money Supply and LGDP-I has a positive impact on the
dependent variable (GDP). But the GE (Government Expenditure) and M2
(Money Supply) has a significant impact on the model with 2.800 and
0.190 respectively. Also the model shows a good fit at 96% of the
dependent variable accounted for by independent variable.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Following
the classical prescription before the great depression of the 1930’s the
role of government in the economy were Limited to the few of services
like law and order, natural security and promotion of property rights.
Adam Smith (1776) in his discussion of the proper role of the government
listed three factors. First “protecting the society from the violence
and invasion of other independent societies, secondly, protecting as far
as possible every member of the society from injustice or oppression
every other member and thirdly, erecting and maintaining those public
work which through they may be in the highest degree advantages to a
great society are however of such a nature that the profit could never
repay the expense to ay individual or small group of individual this
list is referred to as the care function of the government. Today
however, the economic role of the government has expanded to include
consumption and investment expenditure.
Government
or public expenditure has served as most commonly used fiscal policy in
growth, expansion, structural transformation and diversification of
economic base. Public expenditure is used for allocation, stabilisation
and distribution (Musgrave and Musgave, 1989). Hence, public expenditure
programmes is a comprehensive set of expenditure policy measures,
designed to achieve a given set of macroeconomic goals including the
restoration of equilibrium between aggregate domestic demand and supply
(IMF 1993).
According
to Gwartney (1998) while countries have moved towards economic freedom
and open markets, government expenditure has increased more and more.
Government expenditure can be defined as spending by the national and
local government and some government based institutions. Economic growth
is an increase in output or income overtime, it is a positive change in
the level of production of goods and services over certain period of
time. Economic growth is measured using real gross domestic product
(G.D.P).
There are
few more hoting debased topics in economic that what the government
expenditure plays in economic growth. Keyesian argued that government
should manage the amount of demand in an economy to maintain full
employment. Since the 1950’s there has been growing evidence that
government intervention can also be flowed and can be imposed even
greater cost in an economy than market failure. There have been growing
concern that government investment expenditure have been, crowding out
supervisor private investments.
Government
expenditure has continued to increase as a share of GDP within the
organisation of economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries,
government expenditures amounted for a larger size of GDP in 2002 that
in 1999. In Nigeria, as in most countries, this is the case. Why this
increase in government expenditure? Is it in the interest of the nation
that the share of government expenditure in GDP is increasing?
Most
growth theories like the big push theory and the balanced growth theory
among others aimed at improving the growth rate in developed countries.
This need for development is hindered by lies saving which is a result
of low aggregation income in most developing countries.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
According
to Dunnet (1990) economic growth is an increase in real per Capital
Gross National Product (GNP). Economic growth is the steady process by
which the productive Capacity of an economy is increased over time to
bring about rising levels of national output and income. Growth is an
engine of development. There can be no development without growth hence;
economic growth is desirable since it is associated with an increase in
welfare.
At the
dawn of this new millennium, Africa in general Nigeria in particular
still faces monumental development like new level of living
characterised by low per capital income inequality, poor health and
inadequate education. All these are consequence of poverty.
Nigeria
present a paradox the country is rich but the people are poor. Per
capital income today in Nigeria is around the same level as 1970.
Meanwhile between 1970 and 2000 over $200 million has been earned from
the exploitation of countries resources. Nigeria is rich on land, oil,
people and natural Gas Resources, yet Nigeria has been bedevilled with
debts problems until just recently when her debt was forgiven.
Nigeria
has been classified by the World Bank as a low income developing
country. She is characterised by wide spread of poverty not less than
60% of Nigerian population are below development report (UNDP) 1988.
The better
reality of the Nigeria situation is not yet that the poverty line is
getting worse by the day but more than four ten of Nigerians live in
conditions of extreme poverty of less than ₦320 per month which barely
provide for a quarter of the nutritional requirement of health living.
The
sluggish growth of the Nigeria economy despite the increase in
government has been rather surprising since independent according to
Kweka, P. J. (1969 – 1986, 1999), government consumption and investment
expenditure in Nigeria has been on the increase. On the other hand, has
not been regular in fact it has been less static. The decade of 1980’s
is generally referred to as Africa “last decade of development
opportunities” Nigerian economy crisis in the early 80’s was attributed
to several factors including the collapse of price. The rise in
international interest rate and domestic policy mistakes.
In order
to successfully map out strategy for accelerating Nigeria’s growth rate
in the year ahead, it is necessary to fully understand the source of
economic growth in Nigeria during the past four decades, one with notice
that government expenditure in Nigeria has been on the increase. To
what extent does this increase in government spending affect the level
of growth in Nigeria? In this work, using data on Nigeria government
expenditure from 1980 – 2009, we will try to answer the question; Does
government expenditure cause the bring about in economic growth in
Nigeria?
1.3 OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
The objective of the study was specifically;
i. To find out if government expenditure significantly affect economic growth in Nigeria.
i. To find out if government expenditure significantly affect economic growth in Nigeria.
1.4 STATEMENT OF HYPOTHESIS
The following null hypothesis will be tested at 0.05 level of significance.
H0: Government expenditure does not significantly affect economic growth in Nigeria.
H0: Government expenditure does not significantly affect economic growth in Nigeria.
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
The result
of the study will be of great benefit to the federal republic of
Nigeria because economic growth is the motor *vehicle) of development.
Development is the sustained education of an entire society and social
activity towards a better tomorrow and more human life. The result of
this study will be significant in the following ways:
1) It will help the Nigerian government and her policy makers to restore fiscal discipline in Nigeria.
2) The
study will be important in debt management in Nigeria. This include
government restricting expenditure within he constraints imposed by
available revenue.
3) It will also have implication for formulating a workable model for Nigeria.
1.6 SCOPE AND LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
This study
will use an empirical analysis of macro-economic environment that
prevailed in Nigeria between 1981 and 2010. However, literature
especially and notable works and event that relates to the study will be
examined.
In the course of this work, many problem were encountered which affected the final result.
First, the
death of required statistics and limited access to literature. Some
journals and publications which could have been of immense help to this
work were unavailable.
Secondly,
the result of the fourth chapter were somehow affected by the problem of
the use of secondary data in Nigeria. Most of the estimates are not
reliable.
Thirdly,
there is the limitation of the small sample size which has its attended
drawbacks. This research work is limited by a number of constraints;
greatest is the absence of vital data that would have boosted its result
expectation. There is also lack of strong evidence in the theoretical
framework of this topic that would have provided a reliable foundation
for us to stem from and particularly Nigeria case. Time constraint is
equally one of them.
Due to the above constraints the data to be used are mainly secondary data.
CHAPTER TWO
2.0 LITERATURE REVIEW
This
chapter two of this work is divided into theoretical and empirical
literature. Theoretical literature has the various economic theories is
saying about government spending while the empirical literature tries to
capture the opinion of the various contemporary research in the same
subject matter.
The objective of the study was specifically;i. To find out if government expenditure significantly affect economic growth in Nigeria.
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