This study evaluates the effect of disaggregated government expenditure on human development in Nigeria from 1981 to 2019. The role of government expenditures impact on human development cannot be overemphasised. The study was motivated by the methodology approach used by the past studies and examined the relationship between government expenditure and human development, where an aggregated approach was adopted in most of these studies. However, this approach can overblow the efficacy, performance and impact of government expenditure policies. In order to have a more robust and accurate assessment of the efficacy, performance and effect of government expenditure on human development, a disaggregated approach was employed. Government expenditure was proxied by government capital and recurrent expenditure on education, health, and other social and community services, while human development is proxied by the human development index (HDI). Ex-post facto research design was adopted while the Augmented Dickey Fuller (ADF) test, Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) model was employed as the estimation and analysis technique. The findings revealed that government capital (β = 0.006335 with p-value of 0.7229 > 0.05) and recurrent (β =0.047668 with p-value of 0.1106 > 0.05) expenditure on health have a weak and insignificant effect on human development, respectively. The result further revealed that government capital (β = 0.119582 with p-value of 0.0000 ˂ 0.05) and recurrent (β = 0.048834 with p-value of 0.0519 within the range of 0.05) expenditure on education have a significant positive effect on human development in Nigeria. The findings also revealed that government capital (β = 0.021134 with p-value of 0.0466 ˂ 0.05) and recurrent (β = 0.034182 with p-value of 0.0270 ˂ 0.05) expenditure on other social and community services have a significant positive effect on human development in Nigeria. The study concluded that government capital and recurrent expenditure invested in education and other social and community services had a positive effect on human capital development in Nigeria, while government capital and recurrent expenditure invested in health had no significant effect on human development in Nigeria. The study recommended, amongst others, that the Nigerian government should prioritise the increase of investment in the education sector by increasing education expenditure, as it has a significant positive impact on human development. It is also significant to improve the funding of other social and community services to further boost human capital outcomes.
Author
(s) Details
MUAZU,
AUWALU
Department of Accounting, Faculty of Administration, Nasarawa
State University, Keffi, Nigeria.
A.S,
ALHASSAN
Department of Accounting, Faculty of Administration, Nasarawa State
University, Keffi, Nigeria.
I.O,
ABDULLAHI
Department of Accounting, Faculty of Administration, Nasarawa
State University, Keffi, Nigeria.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/nabme/v8/5246
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