Abstract:
Nigeria has abundant natural resources to compare with other nations of the world. How do such natural
resources compare with those of other countries at different stages of development? Do the existences of these
natural resources guarantee socio-economic development? What exactly is the problem of Nigeria? Most
importantly, to what extent is Nigeria’s development a function of its natural resources? Relying on
international data sources and empirical research, a sample of twenty countries exhibiting a variety of patterns of
natural resources and development were selected at random. Development and natural resources as composite
variables were illustrated and measured with COPO-DEV Model as measureable in a non-conventional but
more meaningful manner. The outcome indicates that there is no conventional thread relationship between
natural resources and socio-economic developments because the phenomenon works differently, depending on
whether consideration is on developing, newly industrialized, or developed countries. Moreover, the study also
revealed that there is a link between Nigeria’s international trade and world poverty; whose prospects well
beyond the turn of the century appear gloomy. The better supported, emerging industrializing countries of East
Asia and Latin America, where the “prime of development” is rising, paints a divergent picture and revealed
growth at an extraordinary momentum. Additionally, a tale of contrasting fortune between the comparisons of
two selected countries indicated how long term annual economic growth showed a negative domestic
investment translated into marked decline in economic growth.