Nigeria today stands at a crossroads; rich in human capital yet steadily losing many of its brightest minds to opportunities abroad. The country faces a pressing question that continues to resonate across policy circles and everyday conversations: will Nigerians in the diaspora return home to help rebuild the nation they left behind?
Across critical sectors such as healthcare, engineering, technology, and ICT, the pattern is unmistakable. Many of Nigeria’s most skilled professionals have relocated overseas in search of environments where hard work is rewarded, systems function efficiently, and innovation thrives. While this migration has enabled individuals to excel globally, it has also left significant gaps in key sectors at home, weakening the foundations needed for sustainable national development.
ALSO: Kano APC Reacts as Kwankwaso Hosts Peter Obi, Makinde, Dickson at Eid Gathering
The situation in the health sector provides a striking example. Although official narratives sometimes suggest that Nigeria has sufficient medical personnel, realities on the ground tell a different story. A large number of highly trained Nigerian doctors, nurses, and medical specialists now practice in Europe, North America, and other regions, contributing to the advancement of foreign healthcare systems. Paradoxically, when many Nigerian leaders require advanced medical care, they often travel abroad; sometimes receiving treatment from these same Nigerian professionals.
This contradiction raises an important question: if Nigerian experts are capable of strengthening institutions abroad, why are they not empowered to build the same systems at home?
A major part of the answer lies in the environment within which professionals operate. In many developed countries, Nigerian professionals thrive because the systems around them work—there is stable electricity, modern infrastructure, security, competitive compensation, and policies that support productivity and innovation. In contrast, back home, challenges such as unreliable power supply, poor infrastructure, inadequate remuneration, and persistent insecurity continue to push talent away.
Yet the possibility of reversing this trend remains very real. Transforming Nigeria’s experience from “brain drain” to “brain gain” is achievable but it requires deliberate policy choices and strong political will.
First, Nigeria must address the longstanding crisis in the power sector. Reliable electricity is the backbone of any modern economy. Without it, industries struggle, businesses collapse, and innovation is severely limited. At the same time, the government must confront the growing insecurity affecting communities and economic activities across the country.
Equally critical is the urgent need to rebuild national infrastructure. Functional hospitals, quality roads, decent housing, and well-equipped workplaces are essential for professionals who want to apply their expertise effectively. Skilled individuals are unlikely to return to a system that cannot support their work or guarantee their safety and dignity.
If these foundational issues are addressed, the narrative could begin to change. Nigerians in the diaspora—who are already making significant contributions around the world—may become more willing to return home, bringing with them not only knowledge and experience but also new ideas, innovation, and a renewed commitment to national development.
Nigeria does not lack talent. What it lacks is a system capable of retaining and attracting that talent.
The time has come for leadership to move beyond rhetoric and embrace meaningful action. A country cannot continuously export its best minds and still expect to achieve lasting development.
Nigeria belongs to all its citizens. Every Nigerian deserves access to basic amenities such as quality healthcare, decent housing, stable electricity, and security.
If the right conditions are created, Nigerians abroad will not need persuasion to return. Many will come back willingly ready to build, ready to serve, and ready to transform their homeland.
The question is no longer whether they can help fix Nigeria.
The real question is whether Nigeria will create the conditions that make their return possible.
Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM
