Unemployment, a reliable supply of electricity,
and poverty are the most important problems that Nigerians want their
government to address, with crime/security following in fourth place, the
latest Afrobarometer survey shows.
While incoming President Muhammadu Buhari must
contend with immediate fuel, cash, and power crises, citizens’ expressed
priorities can help inform the administration’s agenda for the next four years.
The Afrobarometer survey, conducted in
December 2014-January 2015, shows a continuity of economic concerns and the
growing importance of electricity and crime/security on the public agenda.
Key findings
§ Unemployment, electricity, poverty, crime/security, and corruption are
the problems that citizens cite most often among their top three priorities (Figure
1).
§ Unemployment has been No. 1 among citizens’ concerns in all five
rounds of Afrobarometer surveys conducted since 2003, always cited by about
half of survey respondents. Poverty and corruption have consistently ranked
among the top five problems, while education has declined slightly as a
priority (Figure 2).
§ Electricity and crime/security have been rising rapidly as citizens’ priorities.
Electricity jumped from No. 12 (cited by 11% of citizens) in 2003 to No. 2 since
2008 (cited by 32% of citizens in 2014). Crime/security has moved up from No. 15 (cited by just 5% of citizens)
in 2005 to No. 4 (26%) in 2014.
Afrobarometer
Afrobarometer is a pan-African,
non-partisan research network that conducts public attitude surveys on
democracy, governance, economic conditions, and related issues across more than
30 countries in Africa. Five rounds of surveys were conducted between 1999 and 2013,
and Round 6 surveys are currently under way (2014-2015). Afrobarometer conducts
face-to-face interviews in the language of the respondent’s choice with
nationally representative samples of between 1,200 and 2,400 respondents.
Fieldwork for Afrobarometer Round 6 in
Nigeria was conducted by Practical Sampling International (PSI) in
collaboration with the CLEEN Foundation. PSI interviewed 2,400 adult Nigerians.
The sample covered 33 of Nigeria’s 36 states, as well as the Federal Capital
Territory. It was not possible to conduct interviews in three states in the
North East zone – Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe – due to unrest in the region, so
substitutions of sampling units were made from neighbouring states in the same
zone. Thus, each of the country’s zones is represented in proportion to its
share of the national population. A sample of this size yields results at the
national level with a margin of sampling error of +/-2% at a 95% confidence
level. Previous Afrobarometer surveys have been conducted in Nigeria in 2000,
2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008, and 2012.
Charts
Figure 1: Most important problems that
government should address | Nigeria | 2014
Respondents were asked: In your opinion, what are the most
important problems facing this country that government should address?
(% of
respondents who cited each problem among their top three priorities)
Figure
2: Trend in ranking of most important problems | Nigeria | 2003-2014
(% of respondents who cited each problem among
their top three priorities)
For
more information, please contact:
Kemi Okenyodo,
Executive Director
CLEEN
Foundation
Telephone:
(+234) 1-493-3195
Email:
cleen@cleen.org
Visit us
online at: www.cleen.org and www.afrobarometer.org.
Follow us on Facebook and
Twitter @Afrobarometer.
1 comments:
Life certainly is amazing and each carries a little less or a little more - ask.naij.com. Seeing such a cutting-edge and cool unreal church, I understand that not everyone lives in poverty, and some are even very wasteful))
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