Abstract

The scourge of poverty, including its correlates, has been witnessing an incremental sequence over the years in Nigeria despite the natural endowment of the country. Efforts by various stakeholders to address this problem have not yielded tangible results. Using cross-sectional data collected in 2015 on 775 cassava farmers spread across four geographical zones, this study estimates multidimensional poverty of cassava producers in Nigeria. This is to determine the factors responsible for poverty increase and contribution(s) of these factors to poverty. The study found that about 74% of the respondents were multidimensionally poor. Assets and public/housing utility were the main contributors to aggregate multidimensional poverty index (MPI), while education and health contributed most to povertyreduction. The results also showed major contributing indicators to MPI to be formal employment, school enrolment, years of schooling, frequency of hospital visits, and household assets’ ownership. The South-eastzone of Nigeria had the highest adjusted headcount of poverty among cassava producers. The estimated coefficient of age, farming experience, years of schooling, household size, and access to informal credit were significant determinants of poverty in the study area. In conclusion, the results suggest that although Nigeria is a federation of more than 30 states that continue to rely on nation-wide policy initiatives of the central government, policies on cassava aiming to lift millions of people out of poverty should instead vary according to the peculiar poverty dimensions of each federation unit. We suggest reform in the agriculture sector that will emphasize facilitation and access to incentives (credits, training, extension, cooperate system, etc.) by younger farmers to engage in modern cassava farming, thereby, enhancing the chances of rural cassava growers to move out of poverty.

Highlights

  • Poverty in Nigeria has many dimensions and manifestations, including joblessness, over-indebtedness, economic dependence, lack of freedom, inability to provide the basic needs, or own assets

  • The results suggest that these indicators need urgent attention in order to pull many cassava producers out of poverty in the study area

  • This study investigated the multidimensional poverty status among cassava producers in Nigeria

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Summary

Introduction

Poverty in Nigeria has many dimensions and manifestations, including joblessness, over-indebtedness, economic dependence, lack of freedom, inability to provide the basic needs, or own assets. The poor, especially farmers, perceive their economic circumstances to be fraught with uncertainty affected by events over which they have no control. These economic circumstances are, for example, primary commodity prices, the volume of rainfall, pest attacks, fire outbreaks, changes in soil condition, and social conflicts. Lack of food is the most critical dimension of poverty (CBN, 2005) [1]. Overview of the Current Poverty Eradication Programme in Nigeria. In The Poverty Eradication Programmes in Nigeria: Problems and Prospects; Jega, A., Wakili, H., Eds.; CDRT: Kano, Nigeria, 2002; pp. In The Poverty Eradication Programmes in Nigeria: Problems and Prospects; Jega, A., Wakili, H., Eds.; CDRT: Kano, Nigeria, 2002; pp. 8–33

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