Morale, Productivity and Sustainable Industrial Development in Nigeria

Ejike C. OKOROAFOR, E. B. J. IHERIOHANMA

Abstract


This paper is an analytical discourse on the interface and relationship between morale and productivity and how these have impactful influence on sustainable industrial development in Nigeria. Nigeria is a developing economy that direly needs a strong root and drive for productivity and economic development. This may not be feasible except if the drivers of the economy, particularly the human factor in the production process are not appropriately motivated to energize their morale. This paper that dwelt more on library and secondary sources of materials identified that morale and productivity, though related to each other in many facets, are at the lowest ebbs in Nigeria to essentially drive sustainable industrial development akin to competitive global integrated market economy. It also observed, among others, that certain government truncated policies and poor economic environment within which the human element as factor of production do their work challenge the morale of the operators of the economy. It therefore, recommended, among others, that government policies and work environment should be employees friendly in order to adequately energize them for global practices and to ensure the steady forward movement and progression towards sustainable industrial development in Nigeria.

Keywords: Morale, Productivity, Sustainable industrial development, Government policies.

DOI: 10.7176/DCS/10-8-03

Publication date:August 31st 2020


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ISSN (Paper)2224-607X ISSN (Online)2225-0565

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