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Poverty and Inequality Among Rural Households in Nigeria

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Title: Poverty and Inequality Among Rural Households in Nigeria


1
Poverty and Inequality Among Rural Households in
Nigeria
  • Presented at the AERC Dissemination workshop held
    at UNECA Conference Centre, Addis Ababa
  • 19 September 2006

2
Outline of the Presentation
  • Background
  • Methodology
  • Findings
  • Rural poverty profile
  • Determinants of rural Poverty
  • Social Capital and Poverty
  • Inequality profile
  • Poverty Response
  • Policies and programmes of government
  • Summary and Recommendations

3
Background
  • Poverty is increasingly being recognised as both
    a policy and economic problem in Nigeria.
  • This is stressed by the
  • Nigerian Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper called
    NEEDS document
  • Poverty and Vulnerability Assessment of the
    country
  • Voices of the Poor in Nigeria

4
Why Rural Poverty?
  • Consensus in the literature on poverty is that,
    Poverty is a rural phenomenon (World Bank, 1990
    Fields, 2000).
  • The rural sector is the predominant sector in the
    Nigerian economy.
  • More households are in the rural sector
  • Most people are employed in rural sector
  • It plays some fundamental roles, which include
    job creation at relatively low unit costs, and
    thus remains the most important for economic
    growth
  • The importance of the rural poor is not always
    understood, partly because the urban poor are
    more visible and more vocal than their rural
    counterparts.

5
Objective of the Study
  • objective of our research is to examine the
    determinants of poverty and factors of inequality
    in rural Nigeria.

6
Collaborative II Poverty Research
  • Output of our component of the research includes
    four research reports
  • Inequality in the Distribution of Household
    Expenditure in Rural Nigeria A Decomposition
    Analysis
  • Policies and programmes for poverty reduction in
    rural Nigeria
  • Social capital and poverty reduction in Nigeria
  • Human Capital, Capabilities and Poverty in Rural
    Nigeria

7
Methodology
  • Methodology and analysis are hinged on the
    following procedure.
  • The definition of an indicator of welfare so as
    to identify the poor.
  • Choice of poverty (and inequality) indices
  • The econometric procedure to better understand
    the effects of human capital, social capital and
    local level institutions on rural poverty in
    Nigeria

8
Indicator of Welfare
  • We utilised per capita expenditure as our measure
    of household economic welfare.
  • Four main reasons that are identified in the
    literature why consumption or expenditure is
    preferred to income
  • income is only a measure of welfare opportunity
    and not welfare achievement
  • Expenditure fluctuates less than income and thus
    provides more accurate and stable measure of
    welfare.
  • respondents to survey instrument are more willing
    to give their expenditure information than income
    information,
  • where there is a large proportion of self
    employed and own consumption, measurement of
    income is often fraught with difficulties.

9
Choice of poverty index
  • FGT indices that we intend to use are
  • P0, which is the headcount ratio,
  • proportion of the total population of a given
    group that is poor, based on a given poverty
    line.
  • P1, which is the poverty gap index
  • poverty gap refers to the difference between a
    given poverty line and the mean income or
    expenditure of the poor, expressed as a ratio of
    the poverty line.
  • the poverty severity index, P2.
  • the squared gap takes the square of that distance
    into account.
  • These indices shall thereafter be decomposed
    according to the characteristics of the household
    including human capital and capabilities
    variables.

10
The econometric procedure
  • The approach in this study is to combine
    different approaches in achieving our objectives.
  • We model the determinants of the indicator of
    welfare usually income, consumption or
    expenditure
  • Estimation techniques
  • Probit (for determinants of probability of being
    poor)
  • OLS (for examining determinants of poverty)
  • Tobit (for investigating determinants of social
    capital on poverty)

11
Inequality
  • Inequality Index must satisfy some basic
    properties
  • Pigou-Dalton transfer sensitivity
  • Symmetry
  • mean independence
  • population homogeneity
  • decomposability
  • statistical testability.

12
Inequality
  • generalised entropy measures and the Gini are the
    measures of inequality that are utilised in this
    study
  • Gini index
  • Mean log deviation
  • GE(1) Theil Entropy index
  • GE(2) generalised Entropy index

13
Decomposition of Inequality
  • The degree of measured inequality of the
    distribution of an income variable can be
    decomposed into a component of inequality between
    the population groups Ib and the remaining
    within-group inequality Iw.
  • The decomposition by population subgroups of the
    GE class is defined as
  • Inequality within-group inequality
    between-group inequality

14
Data
  • Merged data from the 1996 General Household
    Survey (GHS) and the National consumer survey
    (NCS) conducted by the Federal Office of
    Statistics as supplemental modules under the
    National Integrated Survey of Households (NISH).
  • Complemented by private survey in six states to
    collect additional data collected by the
    researchers especially for the social capital
    variables

15
Poverty profile of rural Households
16
Poverty profile of rural Households
17
Poverty profile of rural Households
18
Poverty profile of rural Households
19
Poverty profile of rural Households
20
Determinants of Rural Poverty
  • Age of household head
  • Quadratic relationship
  • Poverty initially reduces as age of household
    head increases and after a certain threshold,
    poverty starts increasing as the household head
    grows older.
  • reflects the situation where there is higher
    earning capacity with greater experience and age
    thereby leading to consumption smoothing over the
    life cycle. The magnitude of the quadratic
    parameter is however very low.

21
Determinants of Rural Poverty
  • Gender
  • female headed household has a higher probability
    of being poor than the male headed households
  • Farming Households
  • In addition, households whose head are engaged in
    farming activity have a higher probability of
    being poor and the marginal effect shows that
    this is as about 4 percent.

22
Determinants of Rural Poverty
  • Demographic variables (household size and
    structure
  • Household size has a significant negative effect
    on welfare indicating that the larger the
    household size, the lower the per capita
    expenditure.
  • Household composition matters
  • An that an increase in either the number of
    children or old people in the household will
    reduce the overall welfare level of the household
  • Presence of extra adult has higher depressing
    effect than that of a child

23
Educational Attainment
  • The educational attainment of the household head
    is a major factor in the determinant of welfare
    in the households.
  • education attainment has a strong positive effect
    on the welfare status of the households.
  • education reduces the probability of being poor
    in a household
  • the largest impact is for those who have up to
    post-secondary education, followed by those with
    primary education.

24
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25
Education
26
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27
Social Capital Dimension by Gender
28
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29
Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programmes
  • Agricultural development programmes
  • Promotion of small-scale irrigation (Fadama
    Farming)
  • Agricultural Development Programmes
  • National Agricultural Land Development Authority
  • The Strategic Grains Reserves Programmes etc
  • Non-Farming Programmes
  • Establishment of the Small and Medium Enterprises
    development Agencies (SMEDAN) for the development
    of small and medium scale enterprises in the
    country.
  • National Directorate of Employment

30
Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programmes
  • Micro-Credit
  • Community Banks
  • Nigerian Agricultural, Cooperative and Rural
    Development Bank (NACRDB) have as its main
    thrusts, the establishment of its presence in
    rural Nigeria to offer commercial and development
    Banking services
  • Agricultural Credit Scheme Funds (ACGF)

31
Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programmes
  • Health Sector Programmes
  • Primary Health Care (PHC) Scheme,
  • National Programme on Immunisation
  • Guinea-worm Eradication Programme
  • Education Sector,
  • Universal Basic Education
  • Nomadic Education Programme, etc.

32
Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programmes
  • Coordination of Poverty Alleviation agencies
  • Establishment of National Poverty Eradication
    Programme (NAPEP ) to serve as a coordinating and
    monitoring institution for all poverty
    eradication agencies in the country

33
Summary
  • Poverty is widespread in rural Nigeria and those
    engaged in farm activities are poorer than those
    engaged in non-farming activities.
  • Human capital and capabilities have significant
    effects in determining poverty status of rural
    households in Nigeria.
  • Households with higher social capital are less
    poor using different dimensions of poverty.
  • The social capital dimensions of meeting
    attendance, heterogeneity index and labour
    contribution in LLIs significantly reduce the
    probability of being poor.

34
Summary
  • The level of diversity among members of LLIs,
    meeting attendance and labour contribution score
    have positive influence on the per capita
    expenditure of households.
  • The test of reverse causality between social
    capital and household expenditure indicates that
    the direct effect of social capital on welfare
    outweighs the reverse effect in the explanation
    of the correlation between the two variables.
  • Social capital can complement human capital
    endowment in enhancing welfare and reducing
    poverty.

35
Summary
  • We however found that most of the inequality
    exists within group and not much of differences
    in groups explain appreciable levels of
    inequality in Nigeria except for educational
    attainment of household head and the geopolitical
    zones that the household belong.
  • Poverty reduction measures have had minimal
    impact in addressing the problems of poverty and
    also had insignificant impact on the living
    conditions of the poor.

36
Summary
  • Most poverty alleviation strategies were badly
    implemented and even had no particular focus on
    the poor in terms of design and implementation.
  • The strategies try as much as possible to create
    the opportunity and empower the poor, but they
    are found wanting in the areas of pro-poor growth
    and resource redistribution.
  • Coordination and monitoring of poverty
    alleviation efforts in the country are found
    wanting

37
Recommendations
  • Human capital and capabilities in rural
    households should be addressed through provision
    of adequate education and health to individuals
    especially in rural areas.
  • There is the need for better provision of social
    services, infrastructure and public goods.
  • The effort of poverty alleviation strategies
    should also be geared to empowerment. Through
    political and legal basis for inclusive
    development
  • Public administration that fosters growth and
    equity and promotion of inclusive
    decentralization and community development is
    required.

38
Recommendations
  • Promotion of gender equity, tackling of social
    barriers and support of poor peoples social
    capital needs to be done to enhance empowerment
    of the poor.
  • This calls for a need to formulate an approach to
    helping poor people to manage risk. This calls
    for designing national systems for social risk
    management and addressing civil conflicts.
  • Policies adopted should be consistent and
    sustainable. There is the need for an articulated
    policy document for poverty alleviation in
    Nigeria.

39
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