Employment Creation, Poverty and the Structure of the Job Market in Nigeria

Type Conference Paper - The 53 rd Annual Conference of the Nigerian Economic Society
Title Employment Creation, Poverty and the Structure of the Job Market in Nigeria
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2012
City Abuja
Country/State Nigeria
URL http://econpapers.repec.org/paper/csawpaper/2014-18.htm
Abstract
Job creation is a central part of the policy of almost all African countries. The problems are particularly
acute in Nigeria where over the period of the early 2000s there was a substantial decline in the number of
private wage jobs. While policy discussion focuses on the extent of unemployment the unemployment
rate, as measured in labour force surveys, is low in Nigeria. This is a common finding across a range of
sub-Saharan African countries. To understand the nature of the employment problem it is argued in this
paper that jobs need to be linked to the incomes those jobs generate. While wage jobs do, on average,
produce more income than those in self-employment a critical issue is the extent of the distribution of
incomes within occupational categories and the overlaps across these sectors. It is the very low incomes
we observe in Nigeria at the bottom of the distribution, for both wage and the self-employed, that creates
high exit rates from the labour market – the jobs simply pay too little.
In this paper the evidence is reviewed as to how far the more rapid growth of recent years has translated
into poverty reduction and how these poverty measures link to job creation. There is evidence that the
headcount measure of poverty has fallen and has been associated with a rapid rise in rural employment
over the period from 1999 to 2006. It is this sector which has seen the largest increases in income. This
was not due to investment in human capital, the return for which has fallen over the period, but to a
general increase in the returns to the labour and land owned by the poor.

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