Brain Drain and the Development in Nigeria

CHAPTER ONE

 INTRODUCTION

1.1   Background of Study

1.2   A visit to any of the busy airports in Nigeria such as Muritala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos or Akanu Ibiam International Airport in Enugu, you will notice the great outflux of Nigerians into many countries. More so Nigerians finding their way to more developed regions is becoming a function of employment-driven nature of Nigerian emigration. Also, Nigerian emigration to the West is highly selective of the educated, skilled and professionals who are more likely to be attracted by the economic opportunities of more developed regions. Because of this, the most preferred destinations in Europe were the United Kingdom (184,314), Italy (48,073), Spain (36,885), Germany (22,687) and Ireland (18,540) according to the International Organization for Migration country profile of Nigeria 2014. The United States was the single most important destination of Nigerian migrants in 2013, as it had been since 1990, with 252,172 or about 25 per cent of all Nigerian emigrants. This is a clear manifestation of the superb opportunities offered by the United States with respect to employment, education and training, and social and cultural identification compared with other countries in the world. In recent years, there seems to be an influx into China, India and other Asian countries that hitherto had very few Nigerian citizens. Nevertheless, the number of Nigerian emigrants to these counties is still relatively low. Migration can have a range of social, cultural, political and economic effects. It involves transfer of know-how and skills, financial assets and the transfer of people from one location to another. Migration also has consequences for the individual, the area of origin and the area of destination 2 – on the family, household, society, the economy and development as a whole. The effect of international migration is not limited to remittances and cash inflows alone. It includes a wide range of development issues – governance and legal protection, employment and social, protection, health services and education, tertiary education, knowledge and skills development, economic growth, financial services and growth, agriculture and rural infrastructural development, and environment issues. As in the case of this study, the economic aspect of migration is my focus. Over the years Nigeria has faced a lot of issues in reference to migration, non-exclusive brain drain and it would be important to address these in order to promote her economic development.

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APA

JOSEPH, A. (2022). Brain Drain and the Development in Nigeria. Afribary. Retrieved from https://afribary.com/works/brain-drain-and-the-development-in-nigeria

MLA 8th

JOSEPH, ABAH "Brain Drain and the Development in Nigeria" Afribary. Afribary, 18 Jun. 2022, https://afribary.com/works/brain-drain-and-the-development-in-nigeria. Accessed 29 Apr. 2024.

MLA7

JOSEPH, ABAH . "Brain Drain and the Development in Nigeria". Afribary, Afribary, 18 Jun. 2022. Web. 29 Apr. 2024. < https://afribary.com/works/brain-drain-and-the-development-in-nigeria >.

Chicago

JOSEPH, ABAH . "Brain Drain and the Development in Nigeria" Afribary (2022). Accessed April 29, 2024. https://afribary.com/works/brain-drain-and-the-development-in-nigeria