Presiding Bishop of Living Faith Church
Worldwide (Winners’ Chapel) David Oyedepo said yesterday that about 50
million Nigerian youths were jobless.
Presiding Bishop of Living Faith Church Worldwide (Winners’ Chapel)
David Oyedepo said yesterday that about 50 million Nigerian youths were
jobless.
He added that poverty level in the
country was soaring with an estimated 70 per cent of the population,
mostly rural dwellers, living on less than $1.25 per day.
Quoting from the Global Hunger Index
report of 2014, Bishop Oyedepo said: “Nigeria is among the countries in
the world faced with a high level of hunger threat despite its efforts
at reducing hunger in the last 25 years.”
The cleric, who is the chancellor of
Landmark University, Omu-Aran, Irepodun Local Government Area, Kwara
State, spoke at the institution’s second convocation ceremony.
“Nigeria is blessed with abundant
natural resources that it has not been able to successfully harness to
the benefit of its teeming population.
“Agriculture is the mainstay of
Nigeria’s economy, employing approximately two-thirds of the country’s
total labour force and contributing 40 per cent to gross domestic
product (GDP). Nigeria was ranked 40th out of 79 on the GHI and 156 out
of 187 on the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) 2011 human
index development.
“According to the data from the
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), 2012, poverty is
widespread in the rural areas, where 80 per cent of the population live
below poverty line,” Bishop Oyedepo said.
He said Nigeria’s poverty level could
lead to micronutrient deficiency, erosion of citizens’ well-being and
development, reduce productivity and immunity level as well as increase
sickness and disease.
He urged Nigerians to “wake up to the
reality of charting a path for strengthening the reins of our economy
via productive and creative engagements in entrenching agro-enterprise”.
“Governments over the years had
proffered policy solutions to agricultural development challenges and
indeed implemented a number of them. Our dilemma is that the policies
have not seemed to have addressed the food security challenge.
“A number of efforts of government or
statutory responsibilities considered effective for attaining
agricultural development have not really been effective.
“For example, the Nigerian Agriculture
Development Bank is today moribund despite several years of operation
and several billions of Naira of invested fund. The Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN) agricultural credit scheme with such lofty objective in
which the nation had invested billions of its resources ended up as a
way of getting fund to agriculture projects without significant
contribution to its development,” the cleric said.
No comments:
Post a Comment