Introduction
Poverty in the midst of abundance is a popular paradox
characterizing the Nigerian economy. Nigeria is a
nation blessed with abundant human and natural resources. It is ranked as the
sixth largest exporter of petroleum in the world. Nigeria is the
largest black nation on earth thus having great potential for human resources.
Foreign exchange inflow and outflow through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in
July, 2006, amounted to US$3.25 billion and US$1.16 billion, respectively,
resulting in a net inflow of S$2.09 billion. Cumulative inflows and outflows
through Nigerian economy in the first seven months of 2006 stood at US$34.98
billion and US$12.50 billion, respectively, compared with US$26.42 billion and
US$9.98 billion in the corresponding period of 2005
(CBN, Monthly Report July
2006).
Despite all these Nigerian citizens suffer from wide spread
poverty, the economic output is low in both the private and the public sector due to
corruption, inefficiency, erratic power supply, poor infrastructure and
unrealistic policies. Several attempts have been made to reverse this trend but
to no avail. The austerity measures of the early 1980s, the Structural
Adjustment Programme introduced in 1986 and even the current economic reforms,
have yielded unsatisfactory results as per as the conditions of the common man
are concerned, in fact the conditions are becoming worse every
day.
This paper begins with explanation of relevant macroeconomic
concepts for the benefit of laymen, and then depicts the level of productivity
and poverty in Nigeria in terms of the country’s poor achievement in these areas
as contained in the 2005 UNDP report on human development index. Finally, the
paper attempts to supply the missing links required to increase the output in
the Nigerian economy and minimize poverty among Nigerians.
Explanation of Key Concepts
Ignorance
and general misconceptions about concepts and issues related to economic
development and social welfare contribute to the failure of governments and
philanthropists in their bid to attack mass poverty, unemployment, crime, drug
addiction, illiteracy, disease, environmental degradation and low productivity,
which are manifestations of under-development.
For the benefit of policy makers and executives who operate the
machinery government at the local, state and federal levels but lack sufficient
knowledge of economics, an explanation of key concepts related to macroeconomic
policies becomes necessary. These people have the power to change things for the
better but may be working on the basis of ignorance, shallow understanding of
economic theories
or insincere advice coming from some advisers on economic matters.
Let’s begin with the concept of macroeconomics; it refers to
the study of the aggregate economic behaviour of consumers and producers and of
fundamental economic phenomenon such as inflation, depression and unemployment
with a view to achieving certain desired economic goals. These goals include
price stability, economic growth and development, obtaining a favourable balance
of payment, controlling exchange rates, curtailing unemployment, etc. With the
ever increasing influences of globalization on the economies of nations,
macroeconomic variables such as inflation rate, interest rate, level of
unemployment, growth rate, etc, in one nation can have influence or be
influenced by similar variables in other nations. It is therefore naïve to
formulate macroeconomic policies for a single nation without due consideration
to what obtains in other nations. As globalization advances, macroeconomics is
increasingly becoming irrelevant, it needs to be replaced with globoeconomics, that
is “the study of macro-economic variables and policies of a nation, region or
the entire globe as they influence or are influenced by macroeconomic variables
and policies of other nations or regions as a result of globalization”
(Sulaiman, 2005a).
Output
(productivity) is one of the indicators of economic growth and development; it
refers to number of goods or amount of work or service produced by an
individual, an organization or a nation as a whole. Productivity is considered
high or low in relation to the amount of resources such money, labour and time
used. The total output of an economy is termed the Gross Domestic Product
(GDP).
Poverty
can be described as dearth of the means of meeting the basic and customary needs
of people, which include good shelter, diet, clothing, security, health care,
education and freedom to participate in social activities and lawful
undertakings. As Zango (2002) rightly observes, there is usually a distinction
between absolute and relative poverty:
Absolute
poverty refers to a state in which an individual or household lacks the
resources necessary for subsistence. This is usually measured in terms of the
earnings of individuals and the price index in the society. On the other hand,
relative poverty is individual’s or group’s lack of resources in comparison to
members of another society.
Bannock, Baxter and Davis (1998) provide good
definitions to the terms business cycle, stabilization policy, inflation,
recession, and reflation, which are also relevant to this write-up. Business
cycle refers to fluctuations in the level of national income. For the monetarist
economists such as Milton friedman, business cycle is caused by
the amount of money in circulation, for the neo-Keynesian economists, by the
aggregate demand for goods and services. Other causes of business cycle are
shocks to the economy from changes in technology and from consumers’ taste. The
invention of computers, for instance, will cause shock in a nation that depends
on the production and sale of manual typewriters.
Government uses stabilization policies in order to address a
business cycle. A stabilization policy refers to government action geared at
reducing fluctuations in national income by, for instance, expanding demand when
unemployment exists or reducing it when inflation persists.
Both inflation and recession are undesirable in an economy.
Inflation refers to a persistent rise in the general level of prices. It can be
caused by excess demand, high cost of production and increase in money supply.
It can also be imported into a country through the exchange rate. That is why
the exchange rate is seen as an effective means stabilising a monetary policy.
It is better for nations with many speculators and irrational people to let the
exchange rate to fluctuate between given limits such as + 3.25% against any other
currency than adopting a freely floating exchange rate
system.
Recession refers to a sharp slowdown in the rate of economic
growth. It is less severe than depression which is a downturn in the business
cycles in which high level of unemployment persists.
Reflation is a measure employed by governments to deal with
recession, depression and even stagflation, the simultaneous existence of
inflation and unemployment. It is about increasing aggregate demand in an
economy with a view to reducing unemployment. It can be executed through
printing of money by the central bank or through public sector borrowing
(government borrowing from the private sector). Printing money leads to a rise
in prices, increases in demand for goods and services and employment of more
workers. Public sector borrowing leads to a rise in interest rate and
subsequently stifles private investment in an economy.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) explains money supply and
its relationship
with output in the Nigerian context. The CBN
in its Monetary Policy Series defines money supply in two ways:
narrow and broad money. “Narrow money (M1) is defined to include currency in
circulation plus current account deposits with commercial banks. Broad money
measures the total volume of money supply in the economy and is defined as
narrow money plus savings and time deposits with banks including foreign
denominated deposits”. Base money is made up of currency and coins outside the banking
system plus the deposits of banks with the central bank. (CBN/MPD/Series/02/2006)
On the important relationship between money supply and output
in an economy, and the measures for controlling the former, the CBN explains
that
There is excess money supply when the amount of money in
circulation is higher than the level of total output of the economy. When money
supply exceeds the level the economy can efficiently absorb, it dislodges the
stability of the price system, leading to inflation or higher prices of
goods. When
the CBN changes the level of money supply, it does so through the control of the
base money. If the central bank perceives that there is too much money in
circulation and prices are rising (or there is potential pressure for prices to
rise), it may reduce money supply by reducing the base money (CBN/MPD/Series/02/2006).
The Level of Output and Poverty in Nigeria
The human development index contained in the 2005
UNDP HDI Report is used as the basis for depicting the levels of poverty and productivity in Nigeria
and for comparison with other nations. The human development index (HDI) is a
composite index that measures the average achievements in a country in three
basic dimensions of human development: a long and healthy life, as measured by
life expectancy at birth; knowledge, as measured by the adult literacy rate and
the combined gross enrolment ratio for primary, secondary and tertiary schools;
and a decent standard of living, as measured by GDP per capita in purchasing
power parity (PPP) US dollars.
Selected Human Development Indicators for Selected Countries
from the 2005 UNDP HDI Report
|
Countries |
Hdi ranking for
177 nations |
Hdi value |
Economic performance
gdp
in us
& billions for 2003 |
Government expenditure
on health % of 2002 gdp |
physicians
per 100,000 people 1991-2004 |
Education index |
|
Egypt |
119 |
0.659 |
82.4 |
1.8 |
212 |
0.62 |
|
India |
127 |
0.602 |
600.6 |
1.3 |
51 |
0.61 |
|
Nigeria |
158 |
0.453 |
58.4 |
1.2 |
27 |
0.66 |
|
Norway |
1 |
0.963 |
220.9 |
8.0 |
356 |
0.99 |
|
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