INFLATION AND STANDARD OF LIVING IN NIGERIA
Ogbebor Peter I (),
Oguntodu James A () and
Oyinloye Paul O ()
International Journal of Developing Country Studies, 2020, vol. 2, issue 1, 1-19
Abstract:
Purpose: Standard of living is very germane to every economy. It gives a broad view of how the economy is fairing on a global scale. If an individual cannot get required basic necessities due to low purchasing power, his/her marginal propensity to consume (MPC) rises which makes it more difficult for the individual to live comfortably hence the standard of living dips. Several researches have been carried out but the standard of living still remains abysmally low. From empirical review, we find that several countries in sub-Sahara Africa, Nigeria inclusive suffers from low standard of living. The case of Nigeria being evidently severe as Nigeria has over 91 million people living in abject poverty. Methodology: Time series data on inflation rate and standard of living proxied by the Human Development Index (HDI) between 1998 and 2017 was used for this research. Augmented Dickey Fuller and Phillip-Perron unit root tests were used to test for stationarity of the data. Based on findings, the Auto Regressive Distributed Lagged (ARDL) model was adopted for inferential analyses. Descriptive statistics employed include skewness, kurtosis, Jarque-Bera test and BreuchPagan-Godfrey serial correlation LM test, Breuch-Pagan test for heteroscedasticity and the Durbin-Watson test. Results: Results indicated that there exists a long-run relationship between inflation and standard of living. Inflation exhibited a negative and significant effect with a coefficient of -0.034 against a P-value of 0.017 which implied that a unit increase in inflation brings about 0.034unit decrease in standard of living over the period of study. Contributions to Theory, Policy and Practice: Based on the findings we recommend that a proper blend of fiscal and monetary policies should be deployed to improve the standard of living of Nigerians.
Keywords: Inflation Rates; Living Standards (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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