Abstract
The study investigates the regression analysis of national income and government aggregate expenditure in Nigeria by testing the validity of Wagner’s law and Keynes’s hypothesis for the period between 1970 and 2014. More specifically, by applying time-series analysis, government-spending and national-income variables were found to be non-stationary and cointegrated, thus satisfying a long-run equilibrium condition. In addition, through the application of Granger causality tests to error correction models, unidirectional causality, running from gross domestic product to government-expenditure variables, could be established between the variables and, therefore, only Wagner’s law was found to be valid in Nigeria’s case for the period of study.
Abstract
The main aim of this project work is to find out the study of the use of computer management information system...
Abstract
Against the background of incessant occurrence of flood and its devastating impacts on residents, the resea...
Abstract: This research examines challenges and opportunities in online vocational educatio...
ABSTRACT
This study investigates the impact of fair value accounting on financial statements in Enugu S...
Abstract
The aim of the study is to determine the knowledge, attitude and practices of nurses regarding infection preven...
ABSTRACT
The purpose of the study is to look into the effects of drug abuse, its applications on students in some select...
ABSTRACT
In Nigeria, in spite of the statutory mechanisms put in place to mitigate disputes, the phenomenon has been on the increase and...
Statement of the Problem
Over the years, SMCFs in Nigeria have recorded a low level of participation and have often been sidelined in lar...
ABSTRACT
This study looks at the impact of tariff on the economic growth of Nigeria. It examines the extent to which tariff has brought a...
ABSTRACT
This research work introduces a novel human detection sensor on an IoT node so as to increase the efficiency of sensing human be...