Editorial
Nigeria: The Population Challenge
This year’s World Population Day may have come and gone, but its significance continues to pose great challenges to countries like Nigeria. As usual, the World Population Day was celebrated on July 11, 2011, but with a caution from the United Nations (UN) that the current seven million population “calls for action” from world leaders.
Apparently, the UN’s caution was a reaction to demographers, account of how the world population transited from less than one billion in 1804, two billion in 1927, three billion in 1959, four billion in 1974, five billion in 1987, and six billion in 1999 to seven billion in 2011.
The world body was obviously blowing the alert whistle over an impending population explosion in the world. Experts say the Sub-Sahara African region is hardest hit with a population of 900 million and already overwhelmed by unparalled high birthrate.
Out of this, Nigeria, the most populated African country with 167 million people, ranks as the sixth most populated nation in the world after China, India, United States of America, Indonesia and Brazil.
While some countries, over the years, have mobilised their large population as essential factor in nation building and major asset component, not much is known of what Nigeria is doing with her population.
Accordingly, the UN warned of implication of sustaining the current 3.2 per cent annual population growth rate in Nigeria with a caution that if the current progression continues, Nigeria’s population would exceed 200 million in 2020 and probably hit 300 million in the next 20 years.
This should frighten any responsible nation to say the least. It is worrisome that Nigeria does not seem to be bothered even when she lacks the capacity to contend with the impending population catastrophe, arising from such population explosion.
To a great extent, we are burdened with the triple tragedy of poverty, illiteracy and large families which continually re-inforce themselves against our best efforts.
Therefore, the seeming advantages of increased population have long been eroded by several negative contending factors. For instance, besides the early attempts after the Civil War to reconstruct and develop the country, Nigeria has not experienced accelerated and sustainable development in many spheres of life.
This has led to calls for both human and infrastructural development as a means of checking population explosion. Indeed, we cannot agree more, with the views of the chairman, Senate Committee on National Population Commission (NPC), Senator Maina Lawan and the Director General of NPC, Mr Jamin Zubena that education and good governance are paramount and basic ingredients to healthy population.
Deliberate efforts must be made through good governance to fend for the over 70 per cent of our population living below the poverty line. Also, time has come to end the lip service habitually accorded the education sector because an illiterate society can be compared to a time bomb waiting to explode.
Also, with a population of over 60 per cent under 30 years, it becomes quite imperative to harness the youthful talents through constructive engagement to avoid hordes of unemployed youths and their concomitant impatient tendencies.
Furthermore, we believe that the nation may not achieve its mission in family planning if the girl-child lacks adequate education, healthcare and empowerment.
We are convinced that Nigeria would make a headway in checking population explosion and nuture a productive population if she adopts a holistic approach to tackling the all-pervading influence of corruption in the economy, create jobs, improve standards of living, ensure food security with consistency in policy formulation and sound planning. With that done, we can be sure of a large population that is also an asset rather than a liability.
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