ABSTRACT
This study investigates the impact of
public expenditures of government on the economic growth of Nigeria using the
ordinary least square method for estimating multiple regression models covering
1981-2011 time period. The regression results showed that both capital and
recurrent expenditures impacted positively on economic growth during the period
of study. The recurrent expenditure has a stronger and more accelerating effect
on growth than capital expenditure. This is attributed to the fact that capital
expenditure which is not meant for immediate consumption is more prone to
misuse and embezzlement, and also could make it to be less growth enhancing. .
We can also conclude from F-statistics that the overall model is adequate in
explaining the output growth. Johanssen co-integration tests also reveal long
run relationships between the variables. Government expenditure on
administration and social and community services positively affect economic
growth. The study therefore, among others recommends that government should
place more emphasis on the capital expenditures so as to accelerate economic
growth of Nigeria and that Government should direct its expenditure towards the
productive sectors like education as it would reduce the cost of doing business
as well as raise the standard living of poor ones in the country.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
It is widely known that public
expenditure is an important determinant of economic growth. Prominent classical
and neo-classical economists such as, Romer, Lucas and Solow emphasized the
contribution of public expenditure in their economic growth theories and
models. Some scholars have argued that increase in government spending can be
an effective tool to stimulate aggregate demand for a stagnant economy and to
bring about crowed-in effects on private sector. According to Keynesian view,
government could reverse economic downturns by borrowing money from the private
sector and then returning the money to the private sector through various
spending programmes. High levels of government consumption are likely to
increase employment and stimulate growth. Thus, government expenditure, even of
a recurrent nature, can contribute positively to economic growth. On the other
hand, endogenous growth models such as Barro (1990), predict that only those
productive government expenditures will positively affect the long run growth
rate. In the neoclassical growth model of Solow (1956), productive government
expenditure may affect the incentive to invest in human or physical capital,
but in the long-run this affects only the equilibrium factor ratios, not the
growth rate, although in general there will be transitional growth effects. Others
have argued that increase in government expenditures may not have its intended
salutary effect in developing countries, given their high and often unstable
levels of public debt. . Vedder and Gallaway (1998) argued that as government
expenditures grow incessantly, the law of diminishing returns begins operating
and beyond some point further increase in government expenditures contributes
to economic stagnation and decline.
Various empirical studies on the
relationship between government expenditure and economic growth also arrived at
different and even conflicting results. Some studies suggest that increase in
government expenditure on socio-economic and physical infrastructures impact on
long run growth rate. For instance, government expenditure on health and
education raises the productivity of labour and increases the growth of
national output. Similarly, expenditure on infrastructure such as road, power
etc. reduces production costs, increase private sector investment and
profitability of firms, thus ensuring economic growth (Barro, 1990; Barro and
Sali-i-Martin, 1992; Roux, 1994; Okojie, 1995; Morrison and Schwartz, 1996). On
the other hand, observations that growth in government spending, mainly based
on non-productive spending is accompanied by a reduction in income growth, has
given rise to the hypothesis that the greater the size of government
intervention the more negative is its impact on the economy. (Glomm and
Ravikumar, 1997; Abu and Abdullah, 2010).
In Nigeria, recurrent expenditure
accounted for a greater proportion of total expenditure than the capital
expenditure. For most of the years between 1960 and 1974, recurrent expenditure
accounted for at least 60 percent of the total expenditure. However, from 1974,
the reverse has been the case. Coincidentally, the first year of reversal also
marked the year when government revenue experienced a phenomenal increase. That
year is usually referred to as the peak of the oil boom era. Total federal
government expenditure rose from N164.0 million in 1961 to N5826.8 million in
1977, The growth rate accelerated during the period of civil war when total
expenditure rose by 229percent :from the N225.1million in 1966 to N838.9million
at the end of the war in 1970. The rate of increase in government was highest
in the 1970s when total expenditure increased from N838.9 million in 1970 to
N6826.8million in 1977, recording over 700 percent increase during the period. From
1978 to 1982, the capital expenditure was higher than recurrent expenditure in
terms of the percentage of total expenditure. Between 1983 and 1995 except in
1986 (the year structural adjustment program (SAP) became operational)
recurrent expenditure was higher than capital expenditure. This had a serious
implication for capital formation and the real growth rate of the economy. From
the year 2000 till date, recurrent expenditure, was on the higher trend than
the capital expenditure revealing the burden of the federal government in terms
of salaries, duplication of parastatals, transfer payment and excessive
carrying capacity of the public sector. Despite the rise in government
expenditure in Nigeria over these years, there are still public outcries over
decaying infrastructural facilities. Also, merely few empirical studies have
taken holistic examination of the effect of government expenditure on economic
growth regardless of its importance for policy decisions. More so, for Nigeria
to be ready in its quest to become one of the largest economies in the world by
the year 2020, determining the effect of public expenditure on economic growth
is a strategy to fast-track growth in the nation‟s economy.
Equally of empirical importance is the
implication of public debt on government spending patterns and economic growth.
In Nigeria, several factors have been advanced to explain the changing domestic
debt profile between the1960s to date. The major factors include – high budget
deficits, low output growth, large expenditure growth, high inflation rate and
narrow revenue base witnessed since the 1980s. However, growth was recorded in
2003. Public expenditure as a percentage of GDP increased from 13% in the 1980
– 1989 periods to 29.7% in the 1990–1994 periods. This increased public
expenditures to GDP ratio resulted from fiscal policy expansion embarked upon
during the oil boom era of the 1970s. However, as the oil boom declined in the
1980s, priorities of government expenditure did not change.
Against this background, this study
aims at examining the relationship between public expenditure and economic
growth in Nigeria covering the period 1981-2010, this will assist the policy
makers on the nature of relationship between public expenditure and economic
growth in Nigeria.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Policymakers are divided as to whether
government expansion aid or slow down economic growth. Advocates of bigger
government dispute that government programmes supply useful “public goods” such
as education and infrastructure; they also declare that expansion in government
spending can increase economic growth by increasing the wellbeing of the
people. Proponents of smaller government have the contrary perspective; they
describe that government is too large and that higher spending reduce economic
growth by transmitting additional resources from the productive sector of the
economy to government, which uses them less efficiently.
Various researchers have as shown
divergent opinions on the effect of government expenditure on economic growth.
While some are of the opinion that there is a positive relationship between
government expenditure and economic growth, others have shown that government
expenditure has a negative relationship with economic growth. The nature of the
impact of government expenditure on economic growth is inconclusive; some
authors believed that the impact of government expenditure on economic growth
is negative or non-significant (Taban,2010; Vu Le and Suruga, 2005), others
believed that the impact is positive and significant (Alexiou, 2009; Belgrave
and Craigwell, 1995). This study however will aim to examine the impact of
public expenditure on economic growth in Nigeria by analyzing the impact of
both capital and recurrent expenditures on economic growth. It will also
analyze the impact of government expenditure in its functional dimensions in
the economy namely: General Administration and Social Services.
1.3 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The main objective of this study is to
evaluate the relationship between government expenditure and economic growth
over the 1981 to 2011. The specific objectives of the study shall include:
(i) To analyze of the trend of public
expenditure in the Nigerian economy.
(ii) To examine the impact of public
expenditure on economic growth in Nigeria.
(iii)To examine the impact of
recurrent and capital expenditure on the economic growth in Nigeria.
(iv) To evaluate the impact of general
administration AND social services expenditures on economic growth in Nigeria.
1.4 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
Given the background of this study, it
is pertinent to state explicitly, the research questions which it seeks to
answer. These include:
(i) How does public expenditure affect
economic growth in Nigeria?
(ii) How does the public expenditure
impact on economic growth in Nigeria?
(iii) Does recurrent and capital
expenditure have any impact on the economic growth in Nigeria?
(iv) What is the impact of general
administration expenditure and social services on the Nigerian economy?
TOPIC: THE IMPACT OF PUBLIC EXPENDITURE ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN NIGERIA
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 80
Price: 3000 NGN
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