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Is Nigeria’s Growing Dependence on International Aid Sustainable?

Concerns grow over long-term reliance on external assistance for key sectors

by Adenike Adeodun

KEY POINTS


  • Nigeria heavily relies on foreign aid to fund key sectors like healthcare and education.
  • Public spending on healthcare and education in Nigeria remains below global standards.
  • Nigeria must strengthen governance and increase domestic revenue to reduce aid dependency.

The scale of international aid (2020–2024)

For instance, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Nigeria received an emergency financing package of nearly $104 million from the United States. Also in 2020, the World Bank Board of Directors approved a $114.28 million financing to help Nigeria prevent, detect and respond to the threat posed by COVID-19.

Data from USAID shows that in 2022, the United States gave nearly $1.2 billion in foreign aid to Nigeria, to support economic development, education, democracy, health, energy and climate, humanitarian relief, security, and more. According to a report by Punch, in May 2024, the European Union gave Nigeria £31.5 million to support vulnerable populations.

Dependency concerns: Is Nigeria becoming too reliant?

The impact of aid dependency

The path to self-reliance

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