Life expectancy in Nigeria is now 48.4yrs, says UN report

Date: 30-11-2010 11:55 am (13 years ago) | Author: WhoBdat
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- at 30-11-2010 11:55 AM (13 years ago)
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Life expectancy in Nigeria is now 48.4yrs, says UN report


LATEST figures from the United Nation’s Human Development Report has put Nigeria’s life expectancy at birth at 48.4 years, a little rise from the 47.7 years recorded for the country last year.

The 2010 report, which was unveiled in Abuja yesterday, put Nigeria’s Human Development Index  (HDI) at 0.423, which ranked   the country 142 out of 169 countries with comparable data. Nigeria did not make the very high Human Development rank, neither did it make the High Human Development rating. It was not also ranked among the countries that made it to the Medium Human Development strata.

Also, Nigeria found itself in the lowest ranking nations in the Low Human Development category, escaping from the bottom of the human development index by 27 positions.

The HDI of sub-Saharan Africa as a region increased from 0.293 in 1980 to 0.389 this year, placing Nigeria above the regional average. The HDI trends tell an important story both at the national and regional level and highlight the very large gaps in well-being and life chances that continue to divide our interconnected world.
Nigeria’s expenditure on public health was put at 1.7 per cent of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), while under-five mortality stood at 186 out of every 1,000 live births.

Each year, since 1990, the Human Development Report has published the HDI, which was introduced as an alternative to conventional measures of national development, such as level of income and the rate of economic growth.

The HDI represents a push for a broader definition of well-being and provides a composite measure of three basic dimensions of human development: Health, education and income.

This year’s report celebrates the contributions of the human development approach, which the UN says, is as relevant as ever to making sense of a changing world, and finding ways to improve people’s well-being.

Speaking at the launch of the report in Abuja, UN Permanent Representative and UNDP Resident Representative in Nigeria, Mr. Daouda Toure, stressed that the UN, in collaboration with the National Planning Commission (NPC), the National Universities Commission (NUC), and vice chancellors and academic directors of Nigerian universities, was supporting a process of mainstreaming human development studies in the Nigerian universities curricula.

He added: “We hope to help increase the knowledge base that is critical to bringing out the human development approach, HDI and associated indices, and to make the indices part of the measurements put in place by national authorities. We also look forward to the time when human development expertise availability will contribute to anchoring the democratic competition on substantive issues benefiting the human development.

“Our aim is to make the human development debate more owned by the citizens of the country. Mainstreaming human development studies in the curricula of universities will contribute to Nigeria’s ability to reinforce the ownership of its development approach. In addition, exposing students to the human development approach will be invariably building the momentum for human development focused governance in future.”

He urged the academia to take up the challenge of advancing good governance, issue-based political competition, informed by data and statistics, free and fair elections to get the real choice of the people in the realm of affairs, “which are what will get this country where it wants to be, and indeed deserve to be, among the 20 biggest economies of the world by the year 2020.That is why our programme of support is focusing on those priority areas.”

In his speech at the ceremony, the Minister of National Planning, Dr. Shamsudeen Usman, expressed joy that the UNDP was supporting Nigeria to mainstream the human development reports into the curriculum of Nigerian universities.

He added: “The government fully acknowledges the relevance of the human development report to Nigeria’s development. We are, therefore, fully committed to mainstreaming the outcomes of the 2010 report and subsequent editions of the report into the national development agenda for the transformation of our economy.
We will also work with the UNDP to ensure that both the private sector and sub-national governments in Nigeria take full advantage of the report.”

Posted: at 30-11-2010 11:55 AM (13 years ago) | Newbie
- princedafe at 30-11-2010 01:39 PM (13 years ago)
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Bla Bla Bla and bla.

Dumb post.e
Posted: at 30-11-2010 01:39 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- walerian at 30-11-2010 02:23 PM (13 years ago)
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ok
Posted: at 30-11-2010 02:23 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
Reply
- blings_is_back at 30-11-2010 02:35 PM (13 years ago)
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ok
Posted: at 30-11-2010 02:35 PM (13 years ago) | Hero
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- betty55 at 30-11-2010 05:05 PM (13 years ago)
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@princedafe abi we go change ur profile name to dumb or useless post? everytime u comment on anypost those are the words u always used na wao
Posted: at 30-11-2010 05:05 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- Eucharia at 30-11-2010 05:14 PM (13 years ago)
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Quote from: princedafe on 30-11-2010 01:39 PM
Bla Bla Bla and bla.

Dumb post.e

Supported for only today
Posted: at 30-11-2010 05:14 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- nice9ija at 30-11-2010 05:27 PM (13 years ago)
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them dey crazy
Posted: at 30-11-2010 05:27 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- mediaexcell at 30-11-2010 05:51 PM (13 years ago)
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 :ooopsy! we don hear am..
Posted: at 30-11-2010 05:51 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- odiono at 30-11-2010 05:53 PM (13 years ago)
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well better than say stagnancy or retrogression! at least some progress though too little!
Posted: at 30-11-2010 05:53 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- jimmyfontana at 30-11-2010 06:34 PM (13 years ago)
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from where they get the  report
Posted: at 30-11-2010 06:34 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- 4kasibe247 at 30-11-2010 06:34 PM (13 years ago)
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ok
Posted: at 30-11-2010 06:34 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
Reply
- LovingMike at 30-11-2010 06:47 PM (13 years ago)
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We reject it.
Posted: at 30-11-2010 06:47 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- Renewed at 30-11-2010 07:08 PM (13 years ago)
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I don't believe this...

Posted: at 30-11-2010 07:08 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- lafaze at 30-11-2010 07:45 PM (13 years ago)
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alo alo alo storyo storyo .
Posted: at 30-11-2010 07:45 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
Reply
- lafaze at 30-11-2010 07:46 PM (13 years ago)
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alo alo alo storyo storyo .
Posted: at 30-11-2010 07:46 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- ILOVEIT at 30-11-2010 09:13 PM (13 years ago)
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that wan na story + story = big lie

Posted: at 30-11-2010 09:13 PM (13 years ago) | Hero
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- kenny0147 at 30-11-2010 09:16 PM (13 years ago)
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from where they get the  report
@Jimmyfontana, It was the post my late father was preparing some many years back before he Died...Lol
Posted: at 30-11-2010 09:16 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- ndgreat81 at 30-11-2010 09:21 PM (13 years ago)
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Na lie.... they don't have work..40 ko, 14nee
Posted: at 30-11-2010 09:21 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- yettyness at 30-11-2010 09:22 PM (13 years ago)
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my grandma 98 when she died, my mother says she 60..i don't know..this is rubbish.
Posted: at 30-11-2010 09:22 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- Abby at 30-11-2010 09:56 PM (13 years ago)
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 Grin  they show try again
Posted: at 30-11-2010 09:56 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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