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How Nigeria’s unemployment rate fell from 33.3% to 4.1% in 2 years

unemployment rate

The highly anticipated labour force report by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) was released on Thursday, 24th August 2023, over two years from the last release.

According to the NBS report, Nigeria’s unemployment rate stood at 4.1% in Q1 2023.

This represents a stack difference from the 33.3% recorded in Q4 2020, which has triggered reactions from several quarters, citing that the numbers do not reflect the reality of the Nigerian job market.

The reactions were following the tough economic and business environment in the country, largely due to high inflationary pressure, FX shortages, and increased operating costs amongst others, which have stiffened the operations of several businesses across the country and is believed to have driven an increase in the unemployment rate.

Highlights of the report are given below:

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The NBS has attributed the huge difference to the revision of its methodology, which it explained to be in line with the International Labour Organization (ILO) guidelines. Meanwhile, some major differences were noticeable between the two methodologies.

Definition of working age population

The NBS in its latest report considered persons aged 15 years and above as the working-age population. This is compared to an age group of 15 to 64 years adopted in previous surveys.

Definition of employed individuals

Periodicity

Another notable difference between the two methodologies is the clear distinction between commercial and subsistence agriculture unlike the previous definition of employment in agriculture, which determines employment based on a threshold of 20 hours weekly work.

In the same vein, underemployment is now classified as individuals who worked less than 40 hours in a week but were willing and available to work for more hours unlike the previous methodology, measures just based on a time factor alone (20 to 39 hours weekly).

Why this matter

The labour force report, which highlights the level of employment in the country is a crucial indicator that reveals the state of the job market and its impact on the economy, which informs government policies towards job creation.

The new report reveals promising numbers regarding the Nigerian job market; however, it is still significantly higher when compared to other neighbouring economies in the African region; Niger (0.7%), Ghana (3.69%), and Benin (1.8%).

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