Unraveling the intricate relationship between unemployment, population, and poverty in Sub‐Saharan Africa: Does quality of life matter?

Author:

Zaman Umer1,Onwe Joshua Chukwuma23ORCID,Jena Pabitra Kumar4,Anyanwu Ogochukwu C.5ORCID,Ebeh Joy Eleojo6ORCID,Fulu Obonetse7

Affiliation:

1. Endicott College of International Studies, Woosong University Daejeon South Korea

2. School of Financial and Business Management Studies Federal Polytechnic Ohodo Ohodo Enugu State Nigeria

3. Department of Economics and Development Studies Alex Ekwume Federal University Ndufu Alike Ndufu Ikwo Ebonyi State Nigeria

4. School of Economics Shri Mata Vaishno Devi University Katra Jammu & Kashmir India

5. Department of Economics University of Nigeria Nsukka Nigeria

6. Department of Economics Kogi State University Anyigba Nigeria

7. School of Business and Development Studies Africa Research University Lusaka Zambia

Abstract

AbstractThe study aims to address poverty eradication efforts globally and promote sustainable development goals (viz., SDGs 1 and 8), specifically focusing on improving quality of life, population optimization, job creation, and economic growth. The research investigates the increasing poverty rates in Sub‐Saharan Africa and analyses the role of population, unemployment, and quality of life in 18 selected countries from 2002 to 2019. The study employs the novel panel quantile autoregressive distributed lag method (PQARDL) developed by Chishti and Retish (2023) to address complex econometric challenges. The findings indicate that unemployment significantly contributes to short‐ and long‐term poverty across all market situations (bearish, normal, and bullish). Conversely, population growth significantly discourages poverty across African economies in the short and long term. These effects are observed in the case of remittances and GDP. Interestingly, the impact of infant mortality and life expectancy on poverty remains insignificant in the short term. Still, life expectancy discourages poverty in the long term, while infant mortality increases poverty in bearish, normal, and bullish market situations. As a result, unemployment and population growth are important factors determining poverty in Sub‐Saharan Africa. The study discusses policy directions based on these findings to address poverty effectively.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Development,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

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