Nigeria’s population to hit 440 million by 2050 – Foundation
Nigeria’s population is expected to hit 440 million by 2050, to become the third most populous nation in the world.
The figure, which is predicated on 3.3 percent growth, would have
people of 60 years and above joining the vulnerable groups of children
and the physically challenged.
Making this disclosure in Abuja Monday, the Dave Omokaro Foundation
(DOF) canvassed social, economic and health policies for the growing
number of the nation’s angering population.
The Executive Director of DOF, Dr. Emem Omakaro urged corporate
organisations to include the ageing population in their corporate social
responsibility projects.
According to her, poverty and non-communicable diseases have
conspired to rob a good number of the nation’s senior citizens of
quality living in the twilight of their lives.
Projecting a 30 million population of the elderly by 2050, Dr.
Omakaro charged government at all levels, corporate bodies,
Non-Governmental Organisation’s and families to see the responsibility
of catering to the aged as a sacred mandate.
She cited the practice in developed nations where the system makes
adequate social, health and welfare provisions for the elderly, saying
it’s time Nigeria copied the trend.
At the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the DOF
and the International Institute on Ageing, United Nations-Malta, Dr.
Omakaro projected an ageing population of 205 million for the African
continent in 2050.
She stated that the MoU conferred the right and privileges on DOF as
host organisation for all programmes and initiatives in aspects of the
ageing population in the country.
According to her, the collective objective was to build capacities
for mainstreaming effective proactive ageing strategies and related
policy formation for stakeholders.
She advised the Federal Government to harness existing skills and
passions, with the view to translating policy suggestions into national
open-ended working group on ageing.
The DOF chief charged the government on the urgent need to review
existing draft policies fashioned in 2003 and 2008 to reflect emerging
trends and situations.
She explained that the central challenge was to find solution to how
to establish a credible and fiscal dependable public transfer benefits
system, which centres on healthcare for senior citizens.
Dr. Omokaro also stressed the need to ensure that demographic
dividends accruing from investments in education, skill building and job
creation for youths preclude any divestiture by familial transfer to
support ageing parents and to create budget lines to fund ageing
research and policy actions.
The Director of the International Institute on Ageing, United
Nations-Malta, Dr. Marvin Fermosa said the objective of the session was
to improve on current ageing policies that promise an improvement on the
quality of life for the older population, so as to enable older persons
to age actively, successfully and productively.
He identified poor health, poverty, exclusion from decision making
process and violence against the aged as some of the challenges
confronting stakeholders.
Representatives of the Federal Ministry of Health, National
Population Commission, the Budget Office, Ministry of Labour, Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and World Health Organisation were participants at
the event.
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