• Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
    • Government
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
    • PR Nigeria Award
  • E-Paper
Search
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
PRNIGERIA PRNigeria News
PRNIGERIA PRNIGERIA
  • Home
  • Anti-Corruption
    • Chinese nationals jailed in Lagos

      Court Jails Nine Chinese Nationals for Cybercrime in Lagos

      ASUU

      Tackle Corruption, Institutional Decay – ASUU Charges FG

      EFCC Arraigns Bauchi Accountant General Over N8bn Fraud as Court Sentences…

      PRNigeria logo fearured image

      EFCC Arraigns Ex-Convict, Other for Naira Abuse in Lagos

      EFCC Arrests 37 Suspected Internet Fraudsters in Ilorin

  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
    • Comptroller General Nigerian Customs Bashir Adewale

      Nigeria Customs, ICPC and the Audit of Conscience

      Customs Diplomacy: Nigeria, Saudi Arabia Ink Mutual Assistance Deal

      Comptroller General Nigerian Customs Bashir Adewale

      Nigeria, Belarus Forge Alliance to Combat Smuggling, Facilitate Trade

      President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and CG Customs, Bashir Adewale Adeniyi

      Tinubu Hails Customs Boss Wale Adeniyi on Historic Election as WCO…

      WTO Lauds Nigeria Customs for Embracing Global Trade Standards

  • National
    • Police Officer

      Police Bust Kidnapping, Cult Gangs, Arrest 8 Suspects, Recover Weapons

      Shittu Yunus Shittu

      Can Nigeria Lead Africa’s AI Revolution? By Shittu Yunus Shittu

      162 years of the Nigerian Army celebrations

      The First Shot and the Long March: Reflections on 162 Years…

      Asiwaju Adegboyega Solomon Awomolo

      47 Years of Excellence: Honoring Asiwaju Awomolo, SAN

      NCoS inmates

      58 Inmates in Kano Sit for 2025 NECO Exams, Thanks to…

    • Government
      • At BRICS Summits, Tinubu Pushes for Equality in Global Finance, Health…

        Tinubu conference centre generates N700m in 3 weeks – Wike

        Soldiers

        Soldiers, forest guards to tackle insecurity in Kwara State

        MUSWEN Muslim Ummah of South West

        MUSWEN Renews Call for Shariah Courts to Regulate Affairs of Muslims

        Corporate Affairs Commission

        CAC Unveils AI-Powered Registration Portal to Revolutionize Business Registration in Nigeria

  • Security
    • Police Officer

      Police Bust Kidnapping, Cult Gangs, Arrest 8 Suspects, Recover Weapons

      NDLEA Logo

      NDLEA Destroys Cannabis Farms, Seizes 345kg of Drugs, Arrests 37 Suspects…

      NAF Airstrikes, NAF Air, NAF jets

      Scores of Terrorists Eliminated as NAF Bombs Boko Haram Camps in…

      Troops of Operation FANSAN YANMA

      Troops Foil Coordinated Bandits Attacks, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Katsina

      NAF bombardment of terrorists' enclave mounted with solar panels

      NAF Airstrikes Crush Terrorist Camps in Mandara Mountains, Kill Senior JAS…

  • Features
    • Shittu Yunus Shittu

      Can Nigeria Lead Africa’s AI Revolution? By Shittu Yunus Shittu

      162 years of the Nigerian Army celebrations

      The First Shot and the Long March: Reflections on 162 Years…

      From SDP to ADA to ADC: Can the New Opposition Coalition…

      Bashir Adewale Adeniyi MFR

      Adeniyi: Lifting Nigeria to the Pinnacle of Global Customs Authority

      Nigeria’s Growth Numbers Tell Only Half the Story By Umar Farouk…

  • State
    • NDLEA Logo

      NDLEA Destroys Cannabis Farms, Seizes 345kg of Drugs, Arrests 37 Suspects…

      NAF Airstrikes, NAF Air, NAF jets

      Scores of Terrorists Eliminated as NAF Bombs Boko Haram Camps in…

      Troops of Operation FANSAN YANMA

      Troops Foil Coordinated Bandits Attacks, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Katsina

      The suspected notorious Militia member

      Troops Nab Notorious Militia, Recover Weapons in Plateau State

      Police Officer

      Security Forces Nab 2 Suspected ESN/IPOB Terrorists in Enugu

  • Event
    • Asiwaju Adegboyega Solomon Awomolo

      47 Years of Excellence: Honoring Asiwaju Awomolo, SAN

      NCoS inmates

      58 Inmates in Kano Sit for 2025 NECO Exams, Thanks to…

      Troops of the Nigerian Army giving a salute

      162nd Anniversary: Tinubu Salutes Nigerian Army, Hails Troops as Guardians of…

      President & Chairman of Governing Council, Dr. Ike Neliaku

      NIPR Lauds Nigerian PR Firms for Outstanding Performances at 2025 SABRE…

      SCN NGO signs partnership with PRNIGERIA

      SCN NGO Seals Partnership with PRNigeria to Amplify its Humanitarian Projects

    • PR Nigeria Award
  • E-Paper
Home Economy Nigeria’s Greatest Asset- Its Human Capital by Prof Muhammad Ali Pate
  • Economy
  • Features
  • National

Nigeria’s Greatest Asset- Its Human Capital by Prof Muhammad Ali Pate

By
Muhammad Ali Pate
-
November 28, 2023
Prof Ali Pate and General Yakubu Gowon at Barewa Old Boys' Lecture
Prof Ali Pate and General Yakubu Gowon at Barewa Old Boys' Lecture

Nigeria’s Greatest Asset- Its Human Capital by Prof Muhammad Ali Pate
(Being a paper delivered at Barewa Old Boys’ Association BOBA Annual Lecture and Award in Abuja)

Upfront, let me start by stating that, Nigeria’s demography, currently at about an estimated 220 million, is among the fastest growing, youthful, demography in the world, projected to reach 450 million, 4th or 5th most populous nation on earth, by 2050. It is Nigeria’s greatest asset. Not oil, not minerals.

Our palpable historical richness, cultural diversity, energy, creativity, geography, as well as natural resource endowments provide a fertile background for harnessing the most important asset that we have, to elevate Nigeria of the present to a future of greatness, a beacon of hope for Africans worldwide.

However, policymakers at Federal and State levels face the reality that public investment resources are limited, especially now, to determine what choices to make between immediate urgent issues like roads, electricity, other physical infrastructure, and those that directly harness the nation’s human capital.

I will do a few things here: first, highlight the state of Nigeria’s human capital; second, share available evidence between investing in human capital and socio-economic development; and third, outline a few options on how we may move forward.

State of Nigeria’s human capital

Despite having a large, youthful population, Nigeria’s human capital development outcomes are unfortunately amongst the worst in the world. In terms of health, we are on average, among the bottom 5 performers in the world, with women dying from childbirth (maternal mortality), children less than one year dying (infant mortality), children under-five dying (child mortality), and life-expectancy. We are also among the bottom 10 performers in the world in terms of child stunting (malnutrition). Moreover, we have a double burden of disease, meaning in addition to infectious diseases like malaria, tuberculosis, and others, we have a fast-growing burden of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, cancers, and mental ill-health. At the same time, we are also aging, with at least 5 percent of the population considered aged.

The average health numbers hide significant intra-country differences. Take child stunting as an example, the difference between the worst-performing zone and the highest-performing zone in Nigeria is at least three folds. The difference between the worst performing and the highest performing zones is at least four folds for child mortality. There are also several folds difference between the poorest 20 percent of the population and the wealthiest 20 percent of the population on basic health service utilization (like immunization and antenatal visits), maternal mortality, and total fertility rates.

As for the state of education, with nearly 20 million children out of school and an estimated 70 percent learning poverty among children in school, we have a two-tiered educational system, the public basic and secondary education track, which is largely off-track and private basic and secondary education for the children of wealthier Nigerians. We also see this divergence in higher education between public domestic education, even though still modestly functioning, and the glorified university education abroad for children of the wealthier Nigerians. With this, I am sure you can begin to see the dangers ahead, of a highly unequal society, where the gap between the “haves” and “have-nots” is widening.

The fundamental issue behind the above dismal performance is poor government spending on human capital, both in absolute numbers and as a percentage of our national GDP. The low government spending applies to the Federal Government as well as to State Government spending.

Linking human capital to socio-economic development

Now, let me turn to the evidence of the apparent association between human capital development outcomes and economic growth. This is well established, and I will use some of the analysis of my good friend and colleague, a distinguished economist, Professor David E. Bloom, of Harvard University, to illustrate.

The healthier, more educated, and more productive a nation’s population, the more likelihood that that nation will have sustainable, equitable socio-economic development. Healthier, educated girl adolescents grow into healthy, empowered young women who become healthier mothers. During gestation, the developing fetus of a healthier, active, safe mother is exposed to less stress, grows better and is likely to reach term before delivery into a healthy newborn. A breastfed and immunized infant is more likely to survive the transition between newborn and early childhood. Well nourished, fully immunized, and intellectually stimulated child is more likely to get into primary school ready to learn. A well-nourished, healthy child will tend to stay longer in school, successfully transition from class-to-class, have overall better educational attainment and outcomes, and higher lifetime earnings. In turn, increased incomes by individuals and households will then allow governments and households to invest more heavily in human capital development. The virtuous cycle then continues.

Borrowing from David Bloom, the summary diagram (Figure 3) below presents the theoretical and empirical evidence supporting the clear idea of the links between spending on health and education and economic development. In contrast, the evidence that infrastructure-related investments drive economic growth is less clear cut.

The empirical evidence from low- and middle-income countries shows that a 10 percent increase in life expectancy at birth corresponds to 1 percentage point increase in annual GDP per capita growth in the short-term and 0.4 percentage point growth rate in the medium to long term. Similarly, a yearly rise in average educational attainment corresponds to a 0.7 percentage point increase in annual growth in the short-run and 0.3 percentage point higher growth in the medium to long-run. With compounding over time, such rates of change can result in several folds increase in GDP per capita.

The above findings by Bloom and Colleagues are very plausible if one considers that better educated population are more likely to be productive, participate in the labor force, have longer working lives, more likely to establish successful and productive firms, adopt and efficiently assimilate technologies from abroad, and enhance the productivity of their co-workers through beneficial synergies and spillovers. Their results suggest that, on average, individual income is 10% higher for each additional year of schooling received. One year increase in average educational attainment is associated with a 0.5 – 1.2 percentage point increase in the annual growth rate of GDP per capita. Likewise, a 25-point improvement in the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) score – a measure of educational quality – is equally associated with a 0.5 percentage point increase in annual GDP per capita growth. Investments in primary education generally offer higher returns than investments in secondary and higher education, and investments in high quality pre-primary education can also have substantial positive returns, even in very low-income settings. Returns for girls’ education are also generally higher than for boys’ education and have important spillover effects through promoting stronger families and communities, especially where there are significant gender gaps in educational attainment.

The same research also revealed that investments in health also enhance productivity and economic growth through several channels, including (i) healthier workers tend to be more consistently working, and more productive when working; (ii) healthier children tend to perform better in school, attend school for more years, and accumulate more human capital in the process, which tends to enhance their productivity and incomes in adulthood, (iii) healthier individuals have greater incentive to pursue education and save for retirement, (iv) healthier populations are more powerful attractors of foreign direct investment, and (v) health investments that cure or prevent infectious diseases (such as vaccination) have positive spillovers to other individuals.

Good macro-level evidence suggests that health is an important determinant of economic growth. Estimates from the literature indicate that a 10% increase in the adult survival rate leads to a 6.7% increase in productivity per worker and a 4.4% increase in GDP per worker. Other research estimates that, on average, a one-year increase in life expectancy at birth causes a 4% increase in GDP per capita.

Read Also:

  • Police Bust Kidnapping, Cult Gangs, Arrest 8 Suspects, Recover Weapons
  • NDLEA Destroys Cannabis Farms, Seizes 345kg of Drugs, Arrests 37 Suspects in Edo
  • Group Condemns Amaechi’s Comment as Inciteful, Dangerous

In addition to enhancing productivity, investments in education and heath facilitate escape from the often-crushing burden of youth dependency. Poor countries tend to have much higher youth dependency rates than wealthier countries. Supporting the basic needs of a relatively large child population imposes a substantial resource burden, necessitating the diversion of resources from other productive investments and impeding, for decades, the pace of measured economic growth. As child survival improves and as women become healthier, more educated, and more empowered, desired fertility tends to decline. Major drops in fertility initiate a period of lower youth dependency, during which resources are freed up for other productive investments. If properly harnessed, this fertility transition can result in a sizeable boost to economic growth, known as the “demographic dividend”. Results from the literature imply that a fall in the TFR by one child leads to a 0.45 percentage point higher economic growth rate.

Other analyses suggest that one-third of East Asia’s “growth miracle” is due to the demographic dividend that followed the strong decline in fertility in China, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan. This one-third figure corresponds to a 0.66 percentage point increase in the per capita GDP growth rate for each one-child reduction in the TFR.

In 2014, I led a study in collaboration with David Bloom, taking Nigeria’s population structure from its latest census data, disaggregated by states and geopolitical zones, and modeled both economic and population growth rate scenarios to 2050, to estimate Nigeria’s potential demographic dividends. Part of that work was published under the World Economic Forum, and I would highlight a few relevant insights. First, that the population structures are different in different zones, with more pyramidal structures in the northwest, northeast and northcentral, while southwest, southeast, and south-south zones had begun their demographic transitions with lower dependency. Second, that some regions like the southeast were ageing faster and beginning to experience a demographic lag due to the rising aged population. Third, that while all geopolitical zones of the country had prospects for reaping demographic dividends, most of the potential dividends can be expected in the northeast, northwest, and northcentral zones. However, the prospects are not guaranteed and require significant investments in health and education at the subnational levels to improve health and learning outcomes, reduce malnutrition, and empower girls and women. Failing to invest in human capital would mean the prospect of demographic dividend would remain elusive, particularly for the northern states and for Nigeria as a whole.

The Future of Nigeria

Now, let’s turn to the future.

Imagine it’s the year 2050. Nigeria stands as Africa’s leading powerhouse, with a population or more than 400 million, achieving an impressive annual average real GDP growth rate of 6.0 percent over nearly three decades. This economic transformation has propelled the nation into upper-middle-income status by size of its economy and its per capita annual income.

The remarkable progress is rooted in both private and public sectors’ productive capital accumulation, heightened employment opportunities, and enhanced total factor productivity.

A significant shift towards high-employment-intensity industries has further bolstered Nigeria’s prosperity, manifesting in substantial improvements in living standards. Notably, the total employment has soared from 46.49 million in 2020 to a remarkable 203.41 million. This surge has correspondingly led to a substantial decline in the unemployment rate, plummeting to a mere 6.30 percent.

Similarly, the number of people living in poverty witnessed a remarkable reduction, plummeting from 83 million in 2020 to less than 10 million. This translates to a significant drop in the poverty rate, from approximately 40 percent in 2020 to much smaller percent.

Nigeria has not only become an industrialized and dynamic economic force but has also transitioned into a knowledge-based economy.

At the core of this success story will be its investments in its greatest asset- its presently young and yet unborn population.

Actualizing this vision for a prosperous country, is to my understanding, at the heart of His Excellency President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR’s Renewed Hope Agenda for Nigeria. As a visionary leader, the President recognized that Nigeria’s success story towards becoming an economic powerhouse is intricately linked to its astute leveraging of the potential of its people to reap its demographic dividend.

At its core, a demographic dividend emerges when a country experiences a rapid shift in its population structure resulting in a youth cohort that can be effectively educated and empowered to contribute to the labor market.

Actualizing this bright future requires significant investments. President Tinubu recognized this fact and, therefore immediately upon coming to office, started bold reforms to expand the fiscal space and improved monetary policy to allow for mobilization of the resources needed to invest in the infrastructure side as well as human capital. The President in his wisdom, saw the convergence between health and social welfare and that a coordinated approach was needed, with the frame of a whole-of-government and sector-wide approaches.

In our coordination role for social welfare, we see impact of government through a life-course lens, where governments at Federal and State levels interface with individuals through their transitions across the life-course. From an adolescent girl who becomes a mother, to the healthy educated young man who becomes a father, to the child born into a family, thriving and well-nourished through school transitions, to be a responsible adult transitioning to labor marker as an adult, to health middle-age and dignified ageing.

Specifically, as regards to health, we see it as both a cause and consequence of economic growth. That’s why we set our goals to save lives, reduce physical and financial pain, and produce health for all Nigerians. We are embarking on major governance reforms, through a sector-wide approach, and collaboration between Federal and State Governments, as recently approved by Mr. President as well as the National Council on Health. Also, we are aligning external development assistance to our national priorities and supportive of public, private sectors, civil society and citizens engagement for better outcomes and impact.

We are expanding, alongside the States, investments in primary health care using the Basic Health Care Provision Fund and others, to make more primary health centers functional, with trained human resources, basic infrastructure and equipment, and commodities, to deliver immunizations, antenatal care, safe delivery, prevention, and treatment for hypertension, diabetes, and mental health. We are also going to expand health infrastructure and equipment at federal hospitals, including for cancer treatment, to address the needs of Nigerians and curb some outbound medical tourism. On human resources, we have recently increased the quotas of key human resources training institutions to begin to expand production.

To make the sector more productive, President Tinubu also approved a new initiative to unlock the healthcare value chains, to increasingly produce domestically some of the diagnostics, pharmaceuticals, and biologics that we need, to retain some of the economic value, create jobs locally, and ensure our health security.

To enable these actions, we are revamping our data architecture and will be collaborating with the Ministry of Communication, Innovation and Digital Economy to pursue digital transformation of the health sector. We are also defragmenting external financing to make it more efficient, effective, as well as transparent and accountable.

Conclusions and Way Forward

Nigeria’s greatest asset is its people. Their health, education, and social well-being should be at the center of all governance and policy actions.

Leadership and elite consensus are key to prioritize investing in basic health and education, particularly for adolescent girls, women, and children. Investing in human capital will unleash the inherent potential of Nigeria’s population and propel it to the brighter and more prosperous future envisioned in President Tinubu’s “Renewed Hope Agenda”.

Subnational leaders, especially Governors in the North of Nigeria, must refocus themselves to prioritize investing in basic health and education for their population.

To manifest the vision of President Tinubu for a prosperous Nigeria, we must tackle head on our high maternal, infant, child mortality, control vaccine preventable diseases, reduce burden of malaria and tuberculosis, deal with hypertension, diabetes, strokes, and cancers through prevention and treatment, and take care of our elderly populations. We must educate and empower the girl child and our women generally, economically, socially, and politically. We must ensure the boy child is also well educated to grow to a responsible adult. We must invest in our youth, help them to transition to adulthood and labor market through quality jobs. By quality jobs we mean well-paying jobs with career progression, harnessing the innovation and entrepreneurial spirit of Nigerians. Doing all these requires improved governance to heal and unify us as a people, collaboration across governments and sectors, stronger institutions, enhanced citizen-focus, reduced wastage, and corruption, improved and stable macroeconomic management overall.

I firmly believe that we can make it happen. That is why I was so grateful that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu allowed us to join his team, because I am confident in his leadership and that the Renewed Hope Agenda he has set forth, if executed as envisioned, will lead to Nigeria meeting its destiny as a great country in Africa and the world.

Muhammad Ali Pate, CON
Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare
Abuja, Nigeria
November 25th, 2023

VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
PRNigeria.com EconomicConfidential.com PRNigeria.com/Hausa/
EmergencyDigest.com PoliticsDigest.ng TechDigest.ng
HealthDigest.ng SpokesPersonsdigest.com TeensDigest.ng
ArewaAgenda.com Hausa.ArewaAgenda.com YAShuaib.com
  • TAGS
  • Barewa Old Boys
  • BOBA
Previous articleNigerian Navy’s Exercise Bolsters Maritime Security, Fosters Economic Growth — Navy Chief
Next articlePolice nab 18 suspected IPOB members for murdering DPO, inspector
Muhammad Ali Pate
Muhammad Ali Pate
https://prnigeria.com
PRNigeria is the pioneer Press Release Distribution agency in Nigeria. A member of image Merchant Promotions limited, PRNigeria encourages individuals and organisations to be more transparent in their information management. with dedicated Editorial staffs, the PRNigeria ensures that information provided on its platforms are timely, factual and authoritative Read more at: //prnigeria.com/about/
Facebook Twitter

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Police Officer

Police Bust Kidnapping, Cult Gangs, Arrest 8 Suspects, Recover Weapons

NAF bombardment of terrorists' enclave mounted with solar panels

NAF Airstrikes Crush Terrorist Camps in Mandara Mountains, Kill Senior JAS Fighters

Shittu Yunus Shittu

Can Nigeria Lead Africa’s AI Revolution? By Shittu Yunus Shittu

162 years of the Nigerian Army celebrations

The First Shot and the Long March: Reflections on 162 Years of the Nigerian Army By Olayemi Esan

Asiwaju Adegboyega Solomon Awomolo

47 Years of Excellence: Honoring Asiwaju Awomolo, SAN

BREAKING: Olubadan of Ibadan Dies After One Year on the Throne

NCoS inmates

58 Inmates in Kano Sit for 2025 NECO Exams, Thanks to State Government

Tinubu conference centre generates N700m in 3 weeks – Wike

Police Arrest 43 Illegal Immigrants, Human Traffickers, Rescue Victim

Multichoice logo

NDPC Fines MultiChoice ₦766m for Data Protection Breach in Nigeria

Abdullahi Aliyu Maiwada

Customs Debunks Fake CBT Recruitment Shortlist Circulating Online

NDLEA Logo

NDLEA Intercepts UK, Saudi-Bond Cocaine Hidden in Lipsticks in Lagos, Arrests Other Suspects

Recent Posts

  • Police Bust Kidnapping, Cult Gangs, Arrest 8 Suspects, Recover Weapons
  • NDLEA Destroys Cannabis Farms, Seizes 345kg of Drugs, Arrests 37 Suspects in Edo
  • Group Condemns Amaechi’s Comment as Inciteful, Dangerous
  • Scores of Terrorists Eliminated as NAF Bombs Boko Haram Camps in Mandara Mountains
  • Troops Foil Coordinated Bandits Attacks, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Katsina
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
© 2020 PRNigeria. All Rights Reserved.
Latest News
Police Bust Kidnapping, Cult Gangs, Arrest 8 Suspects, Recover WeaponsNDLEA Destroys Cannabis Farms, Seizes 345kg of Drugs, Arrests 37 Suspects in EdoGroup Condemns Amaechi’s Comment as Inciteful, DangerousScores of Terrorists Eliminated as NAF Bombs Boko Haram Camps in Mandara MountainsTroops Foil Coordinated Bandits Attacks, Rescue Kidnap Victims in KatsinaNAF Airstrikes Crush Terrorist Camps in Mandara Mountains, Kill Senior JAS FightersAt BRICS Summits, Tinubu Pushes for Equality in Global Finance, Health SystemsTroops Nab Notorious Militia, Recover Weapons in Plateau StateCan Nigeria Lead Africa’s AI Revolution? By Shittu Yunus ShittuTinubu to Troops: You Have My Full Backing to Crush Terrorists, SeparatistsThe First Shot and the Long March: Reflections on 162 Years of the Nigerian Army By Olayemi Esan47 Years of Excellence: Honoring Asiwaju Awomolo, SANDefection Can’t Erase Malami’s Legacy of Impunity, Watchdog Group WarnsAppeal Natasha Akpoti Reinstatement Ruling, Women Groups Urge SenateBREAKING: Olubadan of Ibadan Dies After One Year on the Throne
X whatsapp