Public Education Recurrent Expenditure and Productivity in the Manufacturing Sector in Nigeria
Festus O. Ogunjobi
Ibrahim Abidemi Odusanya
Emmanuel Olajide Adebayo
Journal Information
Journal
The European Journal of Applied Economics
Volume / Issue
Vol. 21, No. 1 (2024)
Pages
81–94
Published
29 November 2023
DOI
10.5937/EJAE21-47898
Abstract
The debate on whether governments should increase their human capital investment is a popular topic within the realm of economics. This research seeks to solve this issue by looking into the importance of productivity in the manufacturing output as well as the function of productive expenditure. The study examines how the recurrent expenditure of public education in Nigeria between 1981 and 2019 affected manufacturing productivity. The study employed the Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) unit root test and Auto Regressive Distributive Lags (ARDL) approach to analyse the relationship between public education recurrent expenditure, public health spending, trade openness, inflation rate, and the output of the manufacturing sector. The study reveals that public education recurrent expenditure is not significantly associated with manufacturing productivity. According to the study, the government should also concentrate on implementing policy frameworks aimed at improving manufacturing sectorproductivity by targeting public recurrent education spending.
Keywords
Citation
Festus O. Ogunjobi, Ibrahim Abidemi Odusanya, Emmanuel Olajide Adebayo (2024). Public Education Recurrent Expenditure and Productivity in the Manufacturing Sector in Nigeria The European Journal of Applied Economics. 21(1) 81–94. DOI: 10.5937/EJAE21-47898
