The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development

Nigeria is a resource-rich country and has become extraordinarily dependent on the oil sector, which accounts for over 90 per cent of exports and government revenues, and contributes up to one third of the GDP (Gross Domestic Product). Evidences have shown that Nigeria’s resource wealth has not tran...

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Main Authors: Murtala Chindo, Ali I. Naibbi, Abubakar Abdullahi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bucharest 2014-11-01
Series:Human Geographies: Journal of Studies and Research in Human Geography
Subjects:
Oil
Online Access:http://humangeographies.org.ro/articles/82/a_82_5_chindo.pdf
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spelling doaj-cf3ecf00a3a540f2a68cab9d54aba6432020-11-24T22:29:16ZengUniversity of BucharestHuman Geographies: Journal of Studies and Research in Human Geography1843-65872067-22842014-11-0182718710.5719/hgeo.2014.82.72The Nigerian Extractive Economy and DevelopmentMurtala Chindo0Ali I. Naibbi1Abubakar Abdullahi2IBB University LapaiUniversity of PortsmouthFederal University, KashereNigeria is a resource-rich country and has become extraordinarily dependent on the oil sector, which accounts for over 90 per cent of exports and government revenues, and contributes up to one third of the GDP (Gross Domestic Product). Evidences have shown that Nigeria’s resource wealth has not translated into meaningful development. For example, while other countries realised positive outcomes from mineral-based developments, Nigeria’s poor state of development is assumed to be a product of the pathologies that are collectively known as the ‘resource curse’. This paper examines various literatures about the resource curse thesis by focusing on the experience of Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil and gas producer and exporting country. The result shows that corruption, government complacency, the Dutch disease, lack of public accountability, neglect of education and excessive external debt/borrowing overhang are all hampering the development goals of the country. Whilst the measurements that support this conclusion were made at the national level, this paper opined and called for the Nigerian resource curse measurements to be looked at from the local scale (communities), where the resource economy hits the ground.http://humangeographies.org.ro/articles/82/a_82_5_chindo.pdfDevelopmentNigeriaOilResourcesResource CurseMinerals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Murtala Chindo
Ali I. Naibbi
Abubakar Abdullahi
spellingShingle Murtala Chindo
Ali I. Naibbi
Abubakar Abdullahi
The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development
Human Geographies: Journal of Studies and Research in Human Geography
Development
Nigeria
Oil
Resources
Resource Curse
Minerals
author_facet Murtala Chindo
Ali I. Naibbi
Abubakar Abdullahi
author_sort Murtala Chindo
title The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development
title_short The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development
title_full The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development
title_fullStr The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development
title_full_unstemmed The Nigerian Extractive Economy and Development
title_sort nigerian extractive economy and development
publisher University of Bucharest
series Human Geographies: Journal of Studies and Research in Human Geography
issn 1843-6587
2067-2284
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Nigeria is a resource-rich country and has become extraordinarily dependent on the oil sector, which accounts for over 90 per cent of exports and government revenues, and contributes up to one third of the GDP (Gross Domestic Product). Evidences have shown that Nigeria’s resource wealth has not translated into meaningful development. For example, while other countries realised positive outcomes from mineral-based developments, Nigeria’s poor state of development is assumed to be a product of the pathologies that are collectively known as the ‘resource curse’. This paper examines various literatures about the resource curse thesis by focusing on the experience of Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil and gas producer and exporting country. The result shows that corruption, government complacency, the Dutch disease, lack of public accountability, neglect of education and excessive external debt/borrowing overhang are all hampering the development goals of the country. Whilst the measurements that support this conclusion were made at the national level, this paper opined and called for the Nigerian resource curse measurements to be looked at from the local scale (communities), where the resource economy hits the ground.
topic Development
Nigeria
Oil
Resources
Resource Curse
Minerals
url http://humangeographies.org.ro/articles/82/a_82_5_chindo.pdf
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