2022
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-1847953/v1
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Trade Liberalization and Poverty in Nigeria (1981-2018): an Empirical Study.

Abstract: This study looked at the effects of trade liberation on reducing poverty in Nigeria. To investigate the data properties, a number of tests were run, including co-integration, the unit-root test, and descriptive statistics. The Auto-Regressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) method was used in this study to examine the variables' short-run and long-run effects. The outcome demonstrated that trade is statistically important in determining Nigeria's poverty rate over the long and short runs. However, a country's economic … Show more

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“…Source: Author's computation 2024 However, International trade has grown in importance over the past several decades as a component of many nations' development goals to create equitable growth that reduces poverty [7]. Governments therefore often engage in trade with the goal of attaining a specific economic outcome for their nation, such as capital inflow, economic growth, or foreign direct investment, among others, since trade has always had an economic impact on nations, even up to the level of a country's civilization [7]. Furthermore, (Claire and Joseph, 2020) stated that African nations gained access to new technology, overseas markets, foreign aid, and other resources as a result of their economy opening up.…”
Section: Fig 1 Poverty Trend In Nigeriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Source: Author's computation 2024 However, International trade has grown in importance over the past several decades as a component of many nations' development goals to create equitable growth that reduces poverty [7]. Governments therefore often engage in trade with the goal of attaining a specific economic outcome for their nation, such as capital inflow, economic growth, or foreign direct investment, among others, since trade has always had an economic impact on nations, even up to the level of a country's civilization [7]. Furthermore, (Claire and Joseph, 2020) stated that African nations gained access to new technology, overseas markets, foreign aid, and other resources as a result of their economy opening up.…”
Section: Fig 1 Poverty Trend In Nigeriamentioning
confidence: 99%