91大神

  • 6 Reasons You鈥檙e Not A Global Talent

    It’s all systemic, but you can fix it

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    There鈥檚 a popular perception that young Nigerians simply don鈥檛 have what it takes to compete in the global market. But those conversations conveniently sidestep the structural barriers that created this reality.

    If you鈥檙e looking for a lecture on hustle culture or lifestyle trends鈥we don鈥檛 do that here.

    We aren鈥檛 exploring vibes, feelings, or personal failings. We鈥檙e looking at the state-sponsored obstacle course that has made “making it” in Nigeria a miracle. Here are the real and systemic reasons Nigeria is failing to platform its vibrant workforce.

    Education 鈥 No Teach Me Nonsense

    Nigeria鈥檚 education system can be summed up very easily: underfunded and out of date. UNESCO recommends that countries dedicate of their national budget to education. Nigeria has only reached such levels once鈥攊n 1997 with 17.59%. Between 1960 and 2023 (when Tinubu became president) the yearly average was a 7.61% spend on education. Tinubu hasn鈥檛 even managed that.

    Here鈥檚 the education allocation for every year of Tinubu鈥檚 presidency.

    • 2024: 5.5%
    • 2025: 6.4%
    • 2026: 6.1%

    In 2023, the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) admitted that some curricula in our tertiary institutions are . This is a disaster that needs no explaining.

    Our education system is not globally competitive, yet it鈥檚 supposed to pump out global talent.

    Power 鈥 A Grid Called Brother Benard

    The Energy for Growth Hub, an energy-focused think tank, says each person needs to be productive. For Nigeria and its estimated population of over , that would require a grid supplying around 27,000 MW of electricity.

    Currently, our grid has an installed capacity of only 13,625 MW, and . By global standards, Nigerians are experiencing 鈥.鈥

    How are you supposed to take those online courses to fill the gaps left by your poor education when you don鈥檛 have electricity?

    Telecoms 鈥 鈥淚 Can Hear You, Can You Hear Me?鈥

    Nigeria鈥檚 internet penetration is , and the connection we do have is shaky, unreliable, and slow. The ranks Nigeria 82nd in the world for mobile internet speeds at 50.53 Mbps, while the global average sits at 109 Mbps. Many international companies use internet speed as a filter to screen out candidates, so Nigerians are being disqualified before we even get a chance.

    Despite these struggles, in January 2025, the government permitted Telcos to raise their prices by 50%. Now, we鈥檙e paying more for the same shitty connection. 

    How can you be a global talent when you鈥檙e constantly disconnecting during standups?

    Passport 鈥 Global Citizens

    On the global stage, the Nigerian passport is a handicap. On the , we鈥檝e dropped in the last twenty years from a rank of 62nd in 2006 to 90th in 2026, with visa-free access to only 44 countries.

    For comparison, Ghana (ranked 68th) has access to 67 countries, and South Africa (ranked 47th) has access to 100. The idea of the 鈥済lobal citizen鈥 does not apply to Nigerians who face some of the strictest visa guidelines in the world.

    This administration has further fumbled our international standing. Tinubu didn鈥檛 appoint ambassadors for over two years of the presidency, leaving us with zero representation internationally. Nobody was beating the drum for why Nigeria is a good place to hire from.

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    Hardware 鈥 The Lifestyle Cost

    Because the government hasn鈥檛 provided an environment for Nigerians to be competitive, individuals have to be their own government, buying everything they need. But so much of this gear is imported; the Naira鈥檚 free fall over the last five years combined with hefty import duties means a lot of Nigerians are basically screwed.

    A $2,000 MacBook that would have cost 鈧900,000 in 2021 now costs about 鈧3 million today. Your Starlink kit will also set you back hundreds of thousands, and that鈥檚 before you calculate the cost of a generator or a solar setup. It is bloody expensive to just “show up” for work when the state treats your professional tools as luxury imports.

    In early 2026, the federal government . We need something similar for the digital workforce. The least the government can do is not make the tools the workforce needs any more expensive.

    Taxes 鈥 Reap where you sow

    Tinubu鈥檚 tax reforms, which came into effect in 2026, show to cut into the pie of freelance and remote workers. Despite providing next to nothing when it comes to the infrastructure people in this industry need, the government now has its hand out asking for a share of global earnings.

    It is a “success tax” on survivors. They are taxing the very people who managed to jump over every hurdle the government itself put in their way.

    Punching Above Our Weight

    Despite the huge government-shaped monkey sitting on our backs, Nigerians are still climbing the global job ladder. The ranked Nigeria 6th out of 193 countries.

    We don鈥檛 have a talent problem; we have an obstacle course built by our own government to keep us from reaching our potential. Yet young Nigerians are putting in the work every single day to be world-class in spite of the odds against them.

    When the world needs talent, we鈥檙e still one of the first places they look. If anyone can鈥檛 find global talent here, they aren’t looking hard enough.

    Having to jump systemic hurdles just to be able to do your job should not be the norm. We should not accept it.

    Nigerians deserve a government that provides the education and infrastructure needed to be competitive. If you鈥檙e wondering why you鈥檙e not considered a world-class or global talent, despite doing everything right, the answer is pretty simple. You don鈥檛 have a world-class government.

    If you want one, you have to demand it. You鈥檙e showing up in the job market with world-class skills, but are you showing up at the polls with stubborn determination for your vote to be counted?

    The portal for Permanent Voters Card (PVC) registrations closes on July 10, 2026. Go to now to register. See you at the polls.

    We want to hear about your personal experiences that reflect how politics or public systems affect daily life in Nigeria. Share your story with us 鈥攚e鈥檇 love to hear from you!


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