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news you can trust I ** thurSDAY 05 DECEMBER 2019 I vol. 19, no 450
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...gender equality bill stuck in NASS Iniobong Iwok & BUNMI BAILEY
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Inside CCNN shareholders grant overwhelming 99.93% approval to merge with BUA’s Obu Cement P. 2
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0.00
10 Y -0.13
30 Y -0.03
12.14
12.43
13.24
5Y 0.00 7.26
NGUS MAY 27 2020 364.51
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NGUS DEC 30 2020 366.87
g L-R: Simbi Wabote, executive secretary NCDMB; Timipreye Silvia, minister of state for petroleum resources, and Victor Okoronkwo, group managing director, Aiteo E&P, welcoming the minister and his guests to the Aiteo NCD Exhibition & mobile office at their sponsored 9th Practical National Content Expo & Conference 2019, in Yenegoa.
Women’s low inclusion in governance, worrying fall back to military era
Continues on page 38
3M 0.00 7.12
NGUS FEB 26 2020 363.50
Analysis
espite accounting for half of Nigeria’s population, female participation in politics in the country has declined significantly in recent years to a record low. Though a patriarchy society, the history of Nigeria and its political emancipation as a country cannot be complete without mentioning the significant contribution of women. BusinessDay findings reveal that despite constituting the bulk of the registered voters in recent years, women political appointments and inclusion in governance in Nigeria from 19992019, has retrogressed significantly in recent years. For the house of representatives, in 1999, the number of women were 12 out of 360 members which was 3.3 per cent but increased to
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Nigeria’s macro indices set to underperform forecasts by year-end 2019 LOLADE AKINMURELE
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igeria’s economy b a re l y t r u d g e d along in 2019, with data likely to confirm another lacklustre year for Africa’s most populous nation. Chances are that the economy, tipped to grow 2.1 percent by year-end, expanded below
population growth for the fourth straight year while foreign direct investment slumped to a six-year low of $848 million. According to ten economists polled in a Business Day survey, unemployment rate also probably soared by the end of the year as a rapidly growing labour force expanded faster than the rate of job creation. According to the World Bank’s
latest economic report, over five million Nigerians entered the labour market in 2018, with 4.9 million joining a growing army of unemployed people compared to the preceding the year. The last unemployment report by government-funded data agency, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), showed 23 percent of the labour force was unemployed while 43 percent
were either unemployed or underemployed in the third quarter of 2018, a 22 percent increase compared to the comparable period of 2017. As at Q3 2018, 21 million Nigerians were unemployed and 39 million either unemployed or underemployed. If unemployed and underemployed Nigerians Continues on page 38