Nigeria - Nigeria Multidimensional Poverty Index Survey 2021, First round
Reference ID | NGA-NBS-MPI-2021-v1.0. |
Year | 2021 - 2022 |
Country | Nigeria |
Producer(s) | National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) - Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) |
Sponsor(s) | Federal Government of Nigeria - FGN - funding United Nations Development Programme - UNDP - funding United Nations Children's Fund - UNICEF - funding |
Metadata | Documentation in PDF Download DDI Download RDF |
Created on | Jun 27, 2023 |
Last modified | Jun 28, 2023 |
Page views | 8993 |
Downloads | 4350 |
Overview
Identification
NGA-NBS-MPI-2021-v1.0. |
Version
Version 1.0 (Anonymous dataset for public distribution) 2022-11-17
Overview
Home to over 200 million people, Nigeria is the most populous country on the African continent and the seventh largest in the world. The United Nations forecasts that the population will double by 2050, making it the third largest country in the world (UNDESA, 2019). Given Nigeria’s size and growth potential, the pressureto safeguard and improve the lives of its citizens is significant. Nigeria was still recovering from its 2016 economic recession when another recession hit in 2020 due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, further derailing its economic recovery. While the COVID-19 regulatory measures implemented in Nigeria helped to control the spread of the virus, many of these necessary and lifesaving measures had deleterious effects on livelihoods, health, human wellbeing, state–society relations and social harmony. The Nigerian economy has grown post-COVID, with the real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rate rising from -1.92% in 2020 to +3.40% in 2021. Despite this economic recovery, the lingering impact of the 2020 recession has undermined household welfare and exacerbated poverty and vulnerability.
In August 2019, the President of Nigeria committed to empowering an additional 100 million people to escape extreme poverty by 2030. This means that, on average, 10 million people must be lifted out of poverty each year, starting from 2020. With the adverse impact of COVID-19 on livelihoods, and unemployment, this challenge has become even more important.
It is within this context that the Nigeria MPI (2022) survey was conducted across the 109 senatorial districts, establishing a baseline for the local government area (LGA) survey due in 2023, and future two-yearly national surveys.
In 2018, Nigeria published its first national MPI, constructed by the National Bureau of Statistics, in the Human Development Report (UNDP, 2018). However, subsequent consultations with stakeholder groups concluded that additional indicators were needed to accurately reflect poverty following the pandemic—including among children. The Nigeria MPI (2022) survey questionnaire therefore included additional variables that were relevant given the new context and national priorities—such as food security, water reliability, underemployment, security shocks, school lag and child deprivations.
The Nigeria MPI (2022) has four dimensions: health, education, living standards, and work and shocks. The number of indicators, and their ambition, have increased. Security shocks were raised in consultations and have been added to the work dimension, which also now includes underemployment. Food security and time to healthcare have been added to the health dimension. School lag has been added to the education dimension as a proxy for quality, and water reliability added to living standards.
The Nigeria MPI (2022) also has a linked Child MPI. This Child MPI extends the Nigeria MPI to include appropriate indicators for children under 5, by adding a fifth dimension of child survival and development. This additional dimension contains eight vital aspects of early childhood development in physical and cognitive domains—including severe undernutrition, immunisation, intellectually stimulating activities, and preschool. While it does not offer individual-level data, it uncovers additional children who according to the extra dimension should qualify as multidimensionally poor.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Individuals
Scope
The Scope of the Multidimensional Poverty Index Surevy includes:IDENTIFICATION,
DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTIC
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY AND WORK HISTORY OF PERSONS 15 YEARS AND ABOVE; WHO WORKED LAST WEEK
FOOD SECURITY
HEALTH
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT CASH TRANSFER
SAFETY AND SECURITY
WATER AND SANITATION
HOUSING CHARACTERISTICS
HOUSEHOLD ASSETS
EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT MEASUREMENT
DEATHS IN THE LAST 12 MONTHS
COMMUNITY/HOUSEHOLD READINESS FOR EPIDEMIC RESPONSE
COVID 19 AWARENESS & VACCINE,
DISABILITY FOR 5 YEARS AND ABOVE
NUTRITION ANTHROPOMETRY.
Coverage
NationalZonal
State
Senatorial
Sector
Household Member
Producers and Sponsors
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) | Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) |
Name | Abbreviation | Role |
---|---|---|
Federal Government of Nigeria | FGN | funding |
United Nations Development Programme | UNDP | funding |
United Nations Children's Fund | UNICEF | funding |
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI) | University of Oxford | Technical Support |
Metadata Production
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|---|
National Bureau of Statistics | NBS | Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) | Metadata Producer |
DDI-NGA-NBS-MPI-2021-v1.0