Type | Journal Article - African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Nairobi for the Second Phase Collaborative Poverty Research Project |
Title | Inequality in the Distribution of Household Expenditure in Rural Nigeria: A decomposition analysis |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
URL | http://www.sarpn.org/documents/d0002271/Household-expenditure_Nigeria_Oct2005.pdf |
Abstract | The Nigerian problem in the 20th century has been the inability to get the best from her human resources. The problem goes beyond low income, savings and growth. It includes high inequality, which includes among others, unequal access to basic infrastructure and unequal capabilities (education and health status). There have been numerous studies on poverty in Nigeria, but few on inequality. Incidentally, the importance of unequal access to opportunities, assets, income and expenditure cannot be overemphasised as it plays important roles in reducing poverty and spurring the economy to long-term development. In Nigeria the poor are not just the rich with less money, but are the poorest of the poor. Households are not only poor; they also suffer from vast inequality in incomes, in assets (including education and health status), in control over public resources, and in access to essential services as well as pervasive insecurity (World Bank, 2000). The distributional consequences of economic growth is therefore one of the main policy issues in Nigeria. Inequality in income distribution has been a subject of controversy in the literature with the Kuznet hypothesis being the focal point. The hypothesis has suggested that as development proceeds, inequality will increase at the very early stages and then decline. However, there has been no consensus on whether a Kuznet curve exists for Africa (Fields, 2000). Although economic growth is important for the success of any economy, it becomes less effective for poverty in the face of massive inequality. Given the depth of inequality in Nigeria, growth may not be enough without giving attention to easing inequality and eliminating barriers that constrain poor people to benefit from a growing economy and to contribute to that growth (Iwayemi et al, 2000). Unless distributional elements are included in developmental programmes and reforms, it will be difficult to solve human development crisis, which might also deter the development of the economy. Rather it has been pointed out that in high inequality countries, upfront actions that are both growth promoting and equity enhancing may be the only realistic option for development to be sustained (Estudilo, 1997). |
» | Nigeria - General Household Survey 1996 |