Effects of remittances on poverty among rural households in Nigeria

Type Journal Article - African Journal of Agricultural Research
Title Effects of remittances on poverty among rural households in Nigeria
Author(s)
Volume 8
Issue 10
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 872-883
URL http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Olatomide_Olowa/publication/258265004_Remittances_and_Poverty_Pa​per/links/00b7d527a5d3d68be7000000
Abstract
Poverty in Nigeria is more prevalent in the rural sector due to dwindling and inequitable distribution of
real income. Remittances can be poverty reducing. However, the extent to which remittances affect
poverty has not been adequately documented in Nigeria. This paper uses Nigerian National Living
Standard Survey (NLSS), 2004 to analyse the impact of domestic remittances (from Nigeria) and foreign
remittances (from African and other countries) on poverty in rural Nigeria. The socioeconomic
characteristics showed that on the average, households that received foreign remittances had older
heads (61.7± . years), smaller household size (4.0 ± 2.5), bigger land size (18.53 ± 26.5 ha), higher
literacy rate (0.50 ± 0.5) and non-poor (0.08 ± 0.3) with higher annual per capita expenditure (?111,768
± ?179,868). Poverty analysis showed that both types of remittances reduce the level, depth and
severity of poverty in rural Nigeria. However, poverty is reduced more when domestic, as opposed to
foreign remittances are included in household income, and when poverty is measured by the more
sensitive poverty measures: poverty gap and squared poverty gap. At a poverty line of ?23,733 per
annum, a 10% increase in domestic remittances decreased Poverty Incidence(PI), Poverty Gap (PG) and
Squared Poverty Gap (SPG) by 1.80%, 1.60% and 1.60% while 10% rise in foreign remittances reduced
poverty incidence (PI), Poverty gap (PG) and Squared poverty gap (SPG) by 0.86%, 0.62% and0.62%
respectively in rural Nigeria. Across GPZs, While 10% increase in foreign remittances reduced PI (-
0.88%) in North-Central it had no effect in North-East (NE) (0.00%). Same increase in domestic
remittances reduced PI, PG, SPG most in the South-South (-0.29%, -1.85% and -0.75%) and least in NE (-
0.09%, -0.82% and -0.22%).

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