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Home Opinion

Nigeria: How Long Will We Fund Our Own Poverty?

by NewsOnline Nigeria
December 27, 2025
in Opinion
0
Nigeria

Nigeria is a nation of immense wealth living with extreme deprivation. This contradiction has become so persistent that global reports now describe Africa’s largest economy as the poverty capital of the world. What should trouble us is not the label itself, but why our leadership keeps validating it.

 

For decades, Nigeria’s abundant resources—oil, gas, solid minerals, and human capital—have been harvested with little benefit to the majority of citizens. Public infrastructure decays, schools and hospitals struggle to function, and insecurity expands. At the same time, a small political elite prospers, acquiring luxury properties abroad, educating their children overseas, and safeguarding their fortunes outside the country they claim to serve.

 

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This pattern cannot be dismissed as incompetence or bad luck. It reflects a deliberate system of extraction and neglect.

 

Successive administrations have failed to build institutions capable of restraining abuse of power. Anti-corruption efforts remain selective. High-profile cases drag endlessly through the courts. Elections too often reward money and influence over competence and performance. Journalists and whistleblowers who expose wrongdoing face harassment, while those implicated in grand corruption are celebrated or quietly recycled into public life.

 

The consequences are severe and visible.
Poverty deepens. Youth unemployment grows. Trust in government collapses. Many of Nigeria’s brightest minds see migration not as a choice, but as survival.

 

Compounding this tragedy is the role of foreign financial systems. Billions of dollars stolen from Nigeria find safe haven in Western banks and real estate markets. These funds—meant for hospitals, roads, power supply, and education—are absorbed into foreign economies, while Nigerians are left to endure the damage. Moral lectures on good governance ring hollow when stolen public wealth is so easily accommodated abroad.

 

Yet responsibility ultimately rests at home. A nation cannot progress when accountability is weak and impunity is normalised. Poverty in Nigeria is not accidental; it is produced and sustained by governance failures that benefit a few at the expense of millions.

 

Real reform requires more than promises. It demands:

institutions that operate independently of political influence;

swift investigation and recovery of stolen assets;

credible elections where performance matters;

protection of journalists and civic voices;

and a citizenry unwilling to exchange long-term progress for short-term inducements.

History offers a sobering lesson: no ruling class willingly dismantles a system that serves its interests. Accountability is enforced, not gifted.

Nigeria’s challenge is not a lack of resources or talent. It is a lack of consequences for abuse of power. Until impunity gives way to responsibility, our wealth will continue to build other nations while our own citizens struggle to survive.

The world is watching, but more importantly, future generations will judge what we tolerated.

 

Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM.

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