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Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by aljharem(m): 2:28pm On Feb 25, 2012
BY MICHAEL EBOH
Poverty has become a household name in Nigeria. Majority of the country’s population, according to the statistics released by the National Bureau of Statistics are poor.

The report said Nigeria’s poverty rate stood at 69 per cent in 2010, while 93.9 per cent of Nigerians considered themselves to be poor in 2010 against 75.5 per cent recorded in 2004.



These startling figures are a stark reality of the true situation of the enterprise called Nigeria and an example of how not to run a country.

Nigeria’s woes started effectively in the 1980s, when government officials and public servants developed a penchant for ineffectiveness, corruption, mismanagement, disrespect for the rule of law and brazen looting of the country’s treasury.

Analysts are of the view that the figures portend a great mismatch, especially when viewed against the vast human and natural resources in the country.

In terms of natural resources, the country has a minimum of 20 mineral resources; is blessed with good conditions suitable for agriculture; food and cash crops and is strategically located.

The country has also produced a individuals with skills and knowledge that have excelled in every area of the global economy.

It is alarming that despite these positives, the country still ranks among the poorest in the world, while a vast majority of the population is considered poor.

The report said Nigerians who had minimal standards of foods, clothing, healthcare and shelter stood at 60.9 per cent in 2010 as against 54.7 per cent recorded in 2004.

Corruption is endemic in Nigeria and for decades public office holders have focused on milking cash from the country’s crude oil exports, instead of focusing on developing infrastructure and creating jobs for the populace.

According to analysts, despite holding the world’s seventh largest gas reserves, which could be used to generate power, Nigeria only produces enough electricity to power a medium-sized European city.

They are of the opinion that more than half of the country’s 160 million inhabitants live without electricity, while the rest have to rely on expensive generators run on diesel supplies controlled by a small and powerful cartel of importers.

Poverty has many causes, ranging from lack of basic services, such as clean water, education, and health care. Another cause of poverty is lack of assets, such as land, tools, credit, and supportive networks of friends and family. A third is lack of income, including food, shelter, clothing, and empowerment — political power, confidence and dignity.

Some of these factors directly affect poverty. Others contribute indirectly, by producing inequality—by stifling the political power of certain sectors of the population, for example, or denying them their dignity or human rights. All of these factors are affected by the environment in which people live.

Mr. Chuks Benson, a sociologist and business man, said that he will not describe himself as poor going by the World Bank’s estimate of who a poor man in today’s Nigeria.

He said he and his family spend not less than N3,000 on a daily basis in feeding, accommodation, transportation, shelter and other miscellaneous expenses.

He explained that coping with the harsh economic condition such as we have in Nigeria has not been easy for him. According to him, there are lots of uncertainties that one needs to grapple with in living in this country.

He cited those uncertainties to include sudden changes in prices of commodities as well as unexpected hike in transport fare by commuters.

“This country is such that you might go to a nearby shop to buy the same item you bought a night before and you will be amazed that the price has suddenly changed. I once bought a roll of tissue paper for N50.00, after two, I went back to buy the same tissue paper and was told that the price has been increased to N60.00.

“Transportation is very epileptic. You actually cannot predict what the price will be each day. The transporters can just wake up one morning and depending on the number of passengers available on the bus station decide to increase the fare.”

He maintained that such sudden changes in pricing showed that the nation operates a hyper-inflationary economy, arguing that any country where this happens, the masses are always impoverished.

On what he thinks about the level of poverty in the country, Benson said, “To say that the economic situation in this country is biting is an understatement. The poverty level is quite high considering the wide gap between the have and have not. Benson further stressed that a situation where a family either stays in shanty or uncompleted building shows government’s insensitivity to the suffering of the masses.

He believes that the government can alleviate the poverty level by simply provision of some basic amenities such as water, electricity, housing, good road network, transportation, medical facilities among others. He noted that there would be automatic transformation in the nation that would reduce the level of poverty if these basic amenities are provided.

He said, “With the provision of these basic amenities, there will be drastic reduction in level of poverty because jobs will be created, people will no longer spend money providing these amenities for themselves. For example, an average Nigerian provides electricity for his household, water and electricity. All this money would have been saved from the person earns.

“Government should take decisive steps to tackle this problem. As a matter of fact, government should be responsive in this regard. Nigeria runs an oil- driven economy and we have the kind of oil that is on high demand all over the world. Government generates a lot of revenues from this. It is just unfair that government, both past and present, has not been able to rise up to their responsibility to the populace,” he averred.

Also speaking, Mr. Ndubuisi Onwutuebi, a Building Engineer who specializes in Plumbing, also said that going by his daily expenditure, he will not be said to be poor. Just like the other respondent, he puts his daily expenses to about N2000/N2500. On what he earns annually, he told Saturday Vanguard that as a contractor, it is difficult to have the right figure since what he makes varies on yearly basis.

He described the country as a place where only those who have ‘god fathers’ in the corridors of power excel. For him, survival in Nigeria is only for the fittest. “There is no help from the government, so each person is left to sort himself out and face his fate alone,” he lamented.

Onwutuebi noted that high level of poverty in Nigeria is as a result of government’s insensitivity to the plight of the masses and her failure to tackle infrastructural decay head long.

He believes that government’s intervention is needed in the area of agricultural development, arguing that investment in that sector will go a long way in reducing the level of joblessness in the country. “I think we have what it takes to feed ourselves in this country, only that the government has failed to do the right thing. The youths need mobilization. Everybody is searching for white collar job and it is not leading us anywhere. If only the government will assist in opening up this sector, a lot of youths who are roaming the streets today will be gainfully employed.

“Look at the Japanese, what made the country was technical jobs. The government should also try and invest in infrastructure. All these will help in bringing down the level of poverty in the land,” he counseled.

Managing Director of FBN Life Assurance Limited, Mr. Val Ojumah, said that with the high unemployment rate in the country, so many people that ordinarily should buy insurance ignore it.

He said “So many people that should actually be buying our insurance products don’t have jobs. Where will they find money to pay our premium? So we have a large population of poor people who can’t buy insurance because having an insurance cover presupposes that you have an income.”

Ojumah said that the fact that the economy is growing at an average of 6.5 to 7 per cent does not in itself mean that the population is growing because unemployment rate is growing at an average of 23.9 per cent.

For Adeshina Samson, an insurance practitioner, the Nigerian economy is not growing like the South African economy which has impacted positively on insurance penetration in South Africa. “If you want to do a comparison between Nigeria and South Africa, for example, you also know that their economy is way ahead of ours. We still have a long way to go here in Nigeria”.

For Andrew Greenwood, Chief Operating Officer of FBN Life, there is poverty in Nigeria as well as a big difference between the rich and the poor. However, the average amount of money that people take home in Nigeria is no worse than other African country, he said.According to him, the average take home pay in Nigeria is probably slightly better than most African countries.

He said “But what I can assure you is that the growth in this market is going to be considerably higher than the growth in South African market over the next ten years because the opportunity is here. Nigeria has 1/5th of the African population living here and I reckon that in fifteen years time a quarter of the African population will be in Nigeria.”

Greenwood said that one of the fundamental thing that is different between the South African insurance market is that it is a lot more sophisticated, stating “Insurance market in South Africa can be classified as first world in terms of the products, systems, technology as ell as awareness and is equivalent to what you can see in countries like the US, Australia, and most of Europe. That is why the penetration is about 50 per cent of GDP in South Africa compared to the five per cent of our market penetration here.


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/02/nigeria-sinks-as-poverty-joblessness-hit-all-time-high/
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by igbaodun: 2:34pm On Feb 25, 2012
If only Ibos were as enterprising, educated, and creative as Yorubas, unemployment wont be this high.

These ugly things should pull their on weight for heavens sake
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by saveall: 2:52pm On Feb 25, 2012
i weep for this nation,while some stupid governors of the state get N10-100million on security 1-3million on food per day and flits of Cars.
During the strick i watched how some good for nothing Nigerians said they should stop cause they wanted to open their shops,this same people swim in poverty cause they cant fight for their freedom.
So will this great punishment continue till the present government is wiped out with their God fathers with them,Then God will be impressed to help us and poverty will reduce to a reasonable measure. angry
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by aljharem(m): 2:55pm On Feb 25, 2012
igbaodun:

If only Ibos were as enterprising, educated, and creative as Yorubas, unemployment wont be this high.

These ugly things should pull their on weight for heavens sake



what an ideeiot, what does this got to do with tribe

Poverty is increasing across Nigeria and you are here blabbing
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by Gaskia: 3:30pm On Feb 25, 2012
The poverty level is alarming, govt has no real data to work with. Imagine the 9
CBN rolling out monetary policies on false figures. Devaluing the naira based on fake figures, moping up 'excess cash' in circulation in the name of curbing inflation where there was no actual excess cash. The managers of our economy sit down in the offices and play with our economy using archaic and imaginary data. That is why CBN usually say inflation has reduced when u and I know that the power of the same amount of money in our hands is reducing by the day. CBN and finance ministry would tell us that GDP has grown but you and I are aware of the worsening standard of living. A combination of OBJ, IBB and GEJ have looted this country to a stupour. Now coupled with an egotic cum religious polarized CBN governor, I weep for my country.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by ASOROCKb(m): 5:29pm On Feb 25, 2012
igbaodun:

If only Ibos were as enterprising, educated, and creative as Yorubas, unemployment wont be this high.

These ugly things should pull their on weight for heavens sake


Ewu Yoruba
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by loco4love: 10:30pm On Feb 25, 2012
Nigeria is doomed. The Nigerian society has become immoral and full of criminal mentality. Pray that you will be able to endure whats COMING.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 10:31pm On Feb 25, 2012
The Nigerian society has become immoral and full of criminal mentality

true that.



God help us.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by antartica(m): 11:34pm On Feb 25, 2012
How can there be jobs when criminals are ruling the roost?Frustrating all the positive efforts.Retarded and uncreative criminals called leaders.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by mensdept: 11:48pm On Feb 25, 2012
loco4love:

Nigeria is doomed. The Nigerian society has become immoral and full of criminal mentality. Pray that you will be able to endure whats COMING.

Yes. It will get worse. Seems that Ojukwu afterall was right. A country that refuses to hear word, that refuses to answer their father's name in preference of the White mans name, a country that loves the EPL more than themselves, a country who's people fly home on white mans airlines and seem content, is a country that will surely collapse.

The world continues to laugh at "Nigger.+Area"
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by antartica(m): 11:54pm On Feb 25, 2012
A country that does not have a language.No language,no instinct and no intution.

Is there any developed nation that speaks artificial language,acquired language?
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 12:04am On Feb 26, 2012
let's stay on track please.

anyone who only likes typing in their dialect should open a separate thread for that.


the topic is about the economic recession in nigeria, for those who have minimal comprehension skills.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by antartica(m): 12:35am On Feb 26, 2012
U can never comprehend tpia,unless u understand what it is all about fundamentally.The connection to the mother earth for those that reasons like you is not as genuine and real like that of common spider;s understanding of its environment.

You are lost in the mist because you don't undrestand you are a mere carbon,rather you think u are a child of jesus.Jesus saves.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 12:37am On Feb 26, 2012
not another anti-Jesus.

undecided
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 12:38am On Feb 26, 2012
anyway!!!

must the thread be derailed. undecided
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by antartica(m): 12:43am On Feb 26, 2012
There is nothing like anti jesus,it is anti fOOlishness.Even ''jesus'' himself said that the truth shall set you free.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 9:46pm On Feb 24, 2013
The Nigerian society has become immoral and full of criminal mentality

still true, unfortunately.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by ba7man(m): 9:51pm On Feb 24, 2013
I don't know bout all this but all my friends are employed and a lot of them are buying cool cars and moving into nice homes....even the girls.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 9:53pm On Feb 24, 2013
hmm, time will tell which report is the actual one then.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by ba7man(m): 10:02pm On Feb 24, 2013
Take a look outside your window...or look around while you're driving. With the way banks are springing up, people are buying brand new cars, young people are setting up their biznesses, people attending shows with silly admittance fees, drinking spots are opening around, shopping plazas are being built and fully rented out b4 completion, markets are thriving, people building houses, buying land.....etc I choose not to belive all this information. Even young men in the ghettos can afford to buy alcoholic drinks, skunk or weed and pay to watch EPL soccer matches in viewing centers owned by people like them.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by Sibrah: 10:08pm On Feb 24, 2013
S9 . . . Lol . . . Multiple NL ID Disorder
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by asha80(m): 10:08pm On Feb 24, 2013
ba7man: Take a look outside your window...or look around while you're driving. With the way banks are springing up, people are buying brand new cars, young people are setting up their biznesses, people attending shows with silly admittance fees, drinking spots are opening around, shopping plazas are being built and fully rented out b4 completion, markets are thriving, people building houses, buying land.....etc I choose not to belive all this information. Even young men in the ghettos can afford to buy alcoholic drinks, skunk or weed and pay to watch EPL soccer matches in viewing centers owned by people like them.
if you live in lagos go iyana ipaja,bariga,ijesha,akute,ketu and the likes and tell me what you see
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by Sibrah: 10:11pm On Feb 24, 2013
^Or Benin, Azare, Lantang, Lokoja, Sapele and other small towns.
Re: Nigeria Sinks As Poverty, Joblessness Hit All Time High by tpia5: 12:43am On Feb 25, 2013
ba7man: Take a look outside your window...or look around while you're driving. With the way banks are springing up, people are buying brand new cars, young people are setting up their biznesses, people attending shows with silly admittance fees, drinking spots are opening around, shopping plazas are being built and fully rented out b4 completion, markets are thriving, people building houses, buying land.....etc I choose not to belive all this information. Even young men in the ghettos can afford to buy alcoholic drinks, skunk or weed and pay to watch EPL soccer matches in viewing centers owned by people like them.

obviously, some sectors are doing fine, however, doesnt mean the overall picture is the same way.



I choose not to belive all this information

might be better if you did.

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