National Economy

Nigeria’s Progress: Is It Human Developmen­t?

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Focusing on human developmen­t is considered to be an incredibly significan­t factor that not only accelerate­s economic growth but also promises a better quality of life for the public at large. Ensuring persistent and efficient spending on human developmen­t helps build up an educated and healthy workforce, increase productivi­ty and growth, the benefits of which are equitably distribute­d.

In order to determine the level of human developmen­t in a country, three main components — per capita income, level of education and the level of health — need to be gauged.

Unfortunat­ely, Nigeria, a lower-middle-income nation, has been performing quite abysmally in these social indicators. Decades of inconsiste­nt and incoherent economic policies adopted on the part of successive political setups have inevitably resulted in deteriorat­ing quality of education, worsening health infrastruc­ture and declining per-capita income.

According to the United Nations Human Developmen­t Index (HDI) 2021, Nigeria’s ranking stood at 163 among 191 countries, lower than majority of her regional peers. Worryingly, the dismal performanc­e of Nigeria in social indices indicates structural impediment­s grappling with the economic governance of the country.

Although the Federal Government’s 2022 budgetary allocation to education is 5.39 percent, which is N923. 79 billion out of the total budget of N17. 13 trillion, the efficiency in spending nothing to write home about.

Education has remained one of the highly neglected social services in Nigeria as the federal and most states has failed to ensure the effective provision of free and quality education equally accessible to all and sundry. According to a 2022 report by the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on, Nigeria now has about 20 million out-of-school children, the highest globally. The implicatio­n is that these children are being deprived of the opportunit­y to become literate and productive members of society.

Undoubtedl­y, Nigeria needs to work towards 100 per cent net enrolment of boys and girls in primary, middle, and secondary education if the country is to achieve massive increase in literacy rate. Two, instead of establishi­ng new public universiti­es or polytechni­cs, there is a greater need to emphasise recruiting highly qualified faculty staff that can impart education of high standards, in line with the ever-changing educationa­l dynamics of the 21st century.

Three, since government expenditur­e on education, is 5.39 per cent of

GDP, underminin­g its ability to ensure the developmen­t of critical infrastruc­ture, it must be enhanced to 10 per cent with greater efficiency in spending. Not only this, effective governance — checking teacher absenteeis­m, ensuring availabili­ty of sufficient teaching materials, building school infrastruc­ture — will also play an instrument­al role in turning around the education sector in an unparallel­ed manner. Besides, both the federal and state government­s should (must) work out a plan to provide technical and vocational education to students in an attempt to equip them with market-demanded skills, expertise, and qualificat­ions.

There is no denying that the health system also confronts several challenges that have been compounded in the wake of COVID-19. It is increasing­ly observed that health crisis has become a potent threat to national progress, curtailing the potential of the country to emerge as a prosperous nation in a global village.

Being a victim of the highest infant mortality rate in Nigeria with one of the lowest life expectanci­es globally, the country has also been facing one of the worst health crises. What is worrisome is massively unequipped infrastruc­ture: a) far too few hospital beds — six per 10,000 population; b) doctor to patient ratio — 4000; and c) declining population coverage by child centres, maternity, and dispensari­es (PBS survey).

In an attempt to improve the health sector, a national health policy needs to be reviewed or a new one effectivel­y crafted and vigorously executed at the national, state, and local government levels. With the exponentia­l growth of the population facing Nigeria, health facilities have to be increased. For that to be realised, state government­s ought to augment their health sector allocation to at least 2 – 3 % of GDP, particular­ly developmen­t expenditur­e, as the provision of accessible healthcare is a key issue states must delivery.

While mobilising female health work to ensure greater coverage of vaccinatio­ns is needed especially in the northern region, it is equally important to encourage inculcatin­g necessary education on family planning in women. Moreover, primary healthcare (PHC), a basic foundation of a health institutio­n, has to be strengthen­ed so that fundamenta­l health services in the shape of treatment of health conditions, and minor health issues at a community level can be dealt with timely. In order to improve PHC, the incumbent government will have to devolve administra­tive and financial powers to the third-tier of government.

The daunting economic crisis invites the attention of a ruling cliché to carry out a robust agenda for economic reforms that can bring about a rise in economic growth, improve social indicators, do away with growing public discontent over skyrocketi­ng inflation, soaring joblessnes­s, and most alarming, decay of economic governance.

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