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ABSTRACT
The purpose of the
study was to determine the role of agriculture in economic growth and poverty
reduction in Nigeria. The data used were collected from the statistical
bulletin of the Central Bank of Nigeria and World Bank’s development
indicators, and covered the period of 33 years ranging from 1981 to 2014.
Multiple regression was used to analyze the data. The result showed that
agriculture has significant impact o n
economic growth in Nigeria. It was also showed that agriculture has significant
impact on poverty reduction in Nigeria. The other variable included in the
model which is non-agriculture output did not have significant impact on
poverty reduction. The study therefore recommends among others that government
provides more funding for agriculture universities in Nigeria to carry out
researchers on all area of agriculture production; this will lead to more
exports and improvement in the competitiveness of Nigeria agriculture
reproduction in international markets. The Central Bank of Nigeria should also
come up with a stable policy for loan disbursement to farmers at a reasonable
interest payback.
Background of the Study
The role of agriculture in economic growth and poverty
reduction has become an issueof great concern in developed and developing
countries. Nnadi (2005) stated that agriculture is indispensable in addressing
economic growth and poverty reduction, which are the most difficult challenges
facing many countries in the world especially developing countries where on the
average, majority of the population are considered poor. Evidences in Nigeria
show that the number of those in poverty has continued to increase. The author
stressed further that the rising profile of poverty in Nigeria is assuming a
worrisome dimension as empirical studies have shown. In consonant with this,
Ojo (2008) opined that, Nigeria, a sub-Saharan African country, has at least
half of its population living in abject poverty. The UN Human Poverty Index in
1999, credited Nigeria with 41.6%, captured the phenomenon more succinctly as
the figure placed the nation as amongst the 25 poorest nations in the world. As
at 2004, the HPI (Human Poverty Index) value for Nigeria, 40.6, ranks 76th
among 102 developing countries for which the index has been calculated. The
country has increasing rate of poverty both at the regions and at the national
level, high unemployment rate, high income inequality, low quality human
capital, high percentage of population on welfare and high out migration in the
face of high economic growth.
Agriculture is the production of food, feed, fibre and other
goods by the systematic growing and harvesting of plants and animals (Akinboyo,
2008). According to, Brandt (2011), agriculture is the cultivation of land,
raising and rearing of animals for the purpose of production of food for man,
animals and industries.