
The National Bureau of Statistics has said 40.1 percent of the country’s population live in poverty.
The NBS, in the executive summary of the 2019 poverty and inequality report released on Monday, said over 82.9 million Nigerians lived below its poverty line of N137,430 per year. It is important to note that this number excludes the state of Borno.
It said while the NLSS 2018-19 included households from Borno, that sample was not representative of the whole state since only households from “accessible” (safe-to visit) areas were interviewed.
“Thus, the Borno sample is considered non-random and non-representative,” the bureau added.
The bureau said between September 2018 and October 2019, it conducted the latest round of the Nigerian Living Standards Survey after 10 years.
The NLSS is the official survey that is the basis for measuring poverty and living standards.
A professor of’ Capital Market Studies, Uche Uwaleke, said if the new national poverty line was N137,430 or $361 per person per annum, which translated to $ 0.98 per day, and captured about 40 per cent of the total population, it showed a considerable improvement over the years.
He added that income inequality may have widened in the light of the jobless nature of GDP growth rates even in periods of high crude oil prices.
“So, to say that in today’s Nigeria, only four out of 10 persons are poor — by whatever yardstick — and that economic inequality is low as suggested by the low Gini index leaves much to be investigated,” he said.
He advised the government to see what use it could make of these survey results while seizing the opportunity of COVID-19 to pursue pro-poor policies.