NBS: 1.4m became unemployed under Buhari
More than 1.4 million Nigerians have fallen into the unemployed
bracket since President Muhammadu Buhari assumed office, according to
the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS). In its third quarter report of
unemployment and underemployment, the bureau revealed that the number of
unemployed people in the country rose by more than
1.4 million in Buhari’s first four months in office (June 1 to September
30). “In Q3 2015, the labour force population (i.e those within the
working age population willing, able and actively looking for work)
increased to 75.9 million from 74.0 million in Q2 2015, representing an
increase in the labour force by 2.60%,” the report said. “This means
1,929,800 economically active persons within 15‐64 entered the labour
force i.e. were able and willing and actively looking for work between
July 1 and September 30 2015. “Within the same period, the number of
unemployed in the labour force, increased by 1,454,620 (529,923 in Q2)
persons between Q2 2015 and Q3 2015 resulting in an increase in the
unemployment rate to 9.9% in Q3 2015 from 8.2% in Q2 2015 from 7.5% in
Q1 2015.” Unemploment Vs Underemployment There are more underemployed in
Nigeria than unemployed This is the fourth consecutive rise in the
unemployment rate since Q3 2014, with the number of unemployed Nigerians
rising to 7.5 million. The NBS also added that about 427,000 new net
jobs were created in Q3 2015, which was unable to match the over 1.9m
new entrants into the labour market. The rate of underemployed (those
working but doing largely menial work or jobs not commensurate with
their qualifications or not fully engaged and merely working for few
hours) during the review quarter however, decreased slightly by 365,593.
Underemployment rate fell to 17.4 percent in Q3 2015(13.2m) from 18.3
percent (13.5m) in Q2 2015, from 16.6 percent (12.2m) in Q1 2015.
Unemployment by Gender More females are unemployed in Nigeria According
to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), 201 million people
globally are unemployed, with Nigeria being responsible for 4 percent of
that global demographic. The highest unemployment rate in the world is
recorded in Djibouti (54%), Congo(46%), Bosnia and Herzegovinian(43%),
Haiti (40%) and Kosovo(35%).
The lowest are found in Qatar (0.2%),
Cambodia (0.3%), Belarus (0.5%), Thailand (0.8%), Benin (1.0%), Laos
(1.40%) and Guinea Bissau (1.80%). With an unemployment rate of 9.9
percent in Q3 2015, Nigeria has better rating when compared than 67
countries but worse than 113 countries, including 21 African countries
that have their rates lower than 9.9 percent. Job creation in the
Nigerian economy fell by 70 percent, according to the last NBS report.
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