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Impact of Foreign Aid on Poverty and Economic Development in Nigeria

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Impact of Foreign Aid on Poverty and Economic Development in Nigeria
CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION
This project focuses on the poverty profile in Nigeria, the foreign aids given to the nation to help alleviate poverty and how it affects the economic development of Nigeria. According to the World Bank website, “poverty is hunger. It is lack of shelter. Poverty is being sick and not being able to see a doctor. It is not being able to go to school, not knowing how to read, and not being able to speak properly. Poverty is not having a job, and is fear for the future, and living one day at a time. It is losing a child to illness brought about by unclean water. And lastly, it is powerlessness, lack of representation and freedom.”

Poverty is the inability to achieve a certain minimum standard of living. It is multidimensional, involving not only a lack of income, but also ill- health, illiteracy, lack of access to basic social services, and little opportunity to participate in processes that influence people’s lives. Mollie Orshansky, who developed the poverty measurements used by U.S government states that poverty is “to be poor is to be deprived of goods and services, and other pleasures that people around us take for granted” (Schwartz, 2005)
Poverty is pervasive; as about 1.2 billion people in the world still live on less than a dollar a day and nearly 850 million people go hungry every night. (World Bank)
According to Jhighan (2003), poverty is a misery-go-round plaguing the less developed countries.

1.1 BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
The poverty level in Nigeria; as described by the World Bank (1996) is a paradox that contradicts the immense wealth it has. Nigeria is a country endowed with human, agricultural, petroleum, gas and large untapped mineral resources. It earned over US$300 billion from just petroleum during the last three decades of the twentieth century. Rather than recoding remarkable progress in national, socio-economic development, Nigeria has retrogressed to being one of the 25 poorest countries of the 21st century while



References: • Al-Khaldi, M., 2007, Impact of Foreign Aid on Economic Development in Jordan (1990-2005), Journal of Social Sciences, vol. 4, no. 1, pp 16-20. • Annen, K and Kosempel, S, 2007, Foreign aid, donor fragmentation, and economic growth, Department of Economics, Guelph. • Asiedu, E and Nandwa, B, 2004, On the impact of foreign aid in education on growth: how relevant is the heterogeneity of Aid Flows and the Heterogeneity of Aid Recipients?, The Review of World Economics. • Bhandari, R, Dhakal, D, Pradhan, G and Upadhyaya, K, 2007, Foreign aid, FDI and economic growth in East European countries, Economics bulletin. • Blackwood and Lynch (1994) “The Measurement of Inequality and Poverty: A Policy Maker’s Guide to the Literature”, World Development 22 (4): 567 – 578. • Central Bank of Nigeria, Statistical Bulletin; Annual Reports and Statement of Accounts (2007). • Chatterjee, S and Turnovsky, S., J., 2005, Foreign aid and economic growth: the role of flexible labor supply, JEL Classifications: E6, F4, and O1. • Durbarry, R, Gemmell, N, and Greenaway, D, 1998, New evidence on the impact of foreign aid on economic growth, Credit Research Paper, No. 98/8. • Easterly, W, 2003, ‘Can foreign aid buy growth?’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 17, no. 3, pp. 23-48. • Ekpo A.H. (2000). “Poverty Alleviation and Sustenance of Democracy in Nigeria” in Uya O.E. (2000) (ed) Civil Society and the Consolidation of Democracy in Nigeria. Calabar: CATS Publishers. • Encarta encyclopaedia • Erixon, F, 2005, Aid and development: Will it work this time?, International Policy Network 2005. • Karras, G., 2006, Foreign aid and long-run economic growth: a panel of developing countries, Journal of International Development, no. 18, pp. 15–28. • M’Amanja, D and Morrissey, O, 2006, Foreign aid, investment, and economic growth in Kenya: A time series approach, CREDIT Research Paper, No. 06/05. • Penguin dictionary of economic 6th edition pg324 • Radelet, S, 2006, “A primer on foreign aid”, Center for Global Development • Sen. A. 1983, “Poor Relatively Speaking”, Oxford Economic Papers 35. • Simon, J, L, 1987, ‘Population growth, economic growth and foreign aid’, Cato Journal, Vol. 7, No. 1. • Tarp, F. (Ed.) Foreign Aid and Development: lessons learned and directions for the future. Routledge London and New York, 2000 • Wangwe, S., 2004, Foreign aid accountability and service delivery in Africa, Damai associates: pp 10

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