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Employment Policy & Labour Markets

Binding Constraints to Inclusive and Job-Rich Growth in Nigeria – Macro and Sector Policy Analysis.

A comprehensive review of macroeconomic and sector policies shaping employment, labour market systems, and inclusive growth in Nigeria

1. Executive Summary

This report applies an inclusive growth analytics framework to examine the structural constraints limiting inclusive and job-rich growth in Nigeria. Despite sustained economic expansion—driven largely by strong performance in non-oil sectors such as agriculture, telecommunications, and trade—the Nigerian economy has struggled to translate growth into decent employment, poverty reduction, and broad-based development outcomes.

The analysis highlights a structural imbalance between economic growth, employment generation, and poverty reduction. While GDP growth and sectoral diversification have improved over time, these gains have not resulted in sufficient job creation or improved labour market outcomes. The report attributes this gap to systemic constraints within both the business environment and labour market systems.

Using a growth diagnostic approach, the study identifies two major categories of constraints: limitations in the business enabling environment and employability challenges among Nigerian graduates. Key constraints include inadequate physical infrastructure, weak institutional and regulatory systems, high cost of finance for small and medium enterprises, and significant skills mismatches within the labour market.

The report concludes that achieving inclusive and job-rich growth in Nigeria requires coordinated macroeconomic and sectoral policy reforms. These include strengthening infrastructure, improving human capital development, enhancing private sector productivity, and aligning education systems with labour market systems demand. It emphasizes the need for integrated policy implementation, institutional coordination, and targeted employment strategies to support economic transformation.

This report is designed primarily for:

❖ National policymakers and economic planners

❖ Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) responsible for employment and economic development

❖ International development organizations and multilateral institutions

❖ Economic policy analysts and labour market researchers

❖ Private sector leaders and investment stakeholders

❖ Academic institutions and development policy think tanks

❖ Organizations involved in skills development and workforce planning

2. Methodology & Analytical Framework

The study adopts an Inclusive Growth Analytics framework, which combines macroeconomic policy analysis with labour market diagnostics to identify the key constraints limiting broad-based economic growth in Nigeria. The analytical approach draws on the growth diagnostics framework developed by Hausmann, Rodrik, and Velasco (HRV), allowing the study to systematically identify binding constraints that hinder private investment, employment generation, and economic diversification.

The analytical approach includes:

  • Inclusive Growth Analytics framework, assessing structural constraints to employment and development outcomes
  • Business Enabling Environment Approach (BEEA), evaluating constraints affecting private sector investment and job creation
  • Employability Analysis Approach (EMPA), examining labour market readiness and skills alignment of graduates
  • Macroeconomic and sector policy analysis, assessing growth patterns, diversification, and sectoral performance
  • Development systems perspective, linking policy frameworks to employment, poverty reduction, and inclusive growth

The research methodology integrates qualitative and quantitative evidence. Data collection involved an extensive review of policy documents and macroeconomic reports, consultations with government institutions, private sector organizations, and development partners, and analysis of labour market statistics from institutions such as the National Bureau of Statistics, the Central Bank of Nigeria, the World Bank, and the International Labour Organization.

3. Key Insights & Major Findings

1.Nigeria’s rapid GDP growth has not translated into proportional job creation or poverty reduction.

2.Economic growth has increasingly shifted toward non-oil sectors, yet employment outcomes remain limited.

3.The Nigerian economy faces a structural imbalance between growth, unemployment, and poverty.

4.Poor infrastructure—particularly electricity, transportation, and telecommunications—limits private sector investment.

5.High financing costs and weak institutional frameworks constrain micro, small, and medium enterprise development.

6.Labour market outcomes are affected by skills mismatch between tertiary education graduates and employer needs.

7.Weak human capital development and inadequate vocational training systems undermine workforce productivity.

8.Limited social protection mechanisms reduce the ability of vulnerable populations to participate in economic growth.

9.Labour market systems are shaped by broader economic and policy structures.

10.Integrated policy coordination across institutions is essential for effective employment policy implementation

Policy brief binding constraints to inclusive and job-rich growth in nigeria

Authors:
Dr. Chijioke J. Evoh; Ugochukwu O. Agu

Publication Date : 2015

PDF Size : 6.05MB

Page Count : 84

Policy Domains Covered

Inclusive Growth

Job Creation

Macroeconomic Policy

Labour Markets

Private Sector Development

Human Capital

Infrastructure Policy

Skills Development

Poverty Reduction

Institutional Reform

Employment Policy

Economic Policy

Development Systems

Dr. Chijioke J. Evoh is an Employment Policy Expert, Labour Market Policy Specialist, and Global Development Policy Advisor with over 15 years of international experience across employment policy, labour market systems, sustainable livelihoods, and Decent Work programming.

He has advised the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the International Labour Organization (ILO), and the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) on labour market reforms, employment systems, and inclusive growth strategies across multiple countries.

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