When the best minds leave home

In recent years, Nigeria has witnessed an alarming wave of emigration popularly referred to as the “japa” phenomenon. Doctors, nurses, engineers, academics, and even skilled artisans are leaving the country in droves, seeking better opportunities abroad. While migration has always been part of human history, the scale and speed at which Nigeria is losing its skilled workforce has reached a level that now threatens national development. The brain drain is no longer just a talking point in urban conversations; it has become a crisis that cuts across households, communities, and critical sectors of the economy.

The health sector is perhaps the hardest hit. According to the Nigerian Medical Association, tens of thousands of doctors have left Nigeria for countries like the United Kingdom, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the United States in the past decade. Hospitals across Nigeria are grappling with severe shortages of healthcare professionals, leading to long waiting times, overworked staff, and increased patient mortality. Many nurses now see foreign recruitment agencies as their gateway to a dignified life, leaving local hospitals understaffed. For patients in rural areas, accessing basic healthcare has become an uphill task.

The education sector is also bleeding. University lecturers, frustrated by poor wages, dilapidated facilities, and constant strikes, are relocating abroad where their skills are better appreciated. This exodus has worsened the quality of tertiary education in Nigeria, as institutions struggle to retain experienced faculty members. The result is a growing gap in mentorship for young scholars and declining global rankings for Nigerian universities. Parents who can afford it increasingly send their children abroad for education, further depleting confidence in the local system.

Technology and engineering are not spared. Nigeria’s young tech talents, once hailed as the pride of Africa’s Silicon Savannah, are being lured abroad by multinational firms offering better pay, stable infrastructure, and access to global networks. Startups that could have thrived locally lose their best hands to overseas opportunities. Similarly, engineers in oil, gas, and construction sectors find little incentive to remain in a system plagued by erratic policies, corruption, and limited innovation.

The push factors behind this mass migration are well known: insecurity, high unemployment, inflation, poor working conditions, and lack of trust in governance. For many, the decision to leave is not merely about money but about the pursuit of dignity, safety, and hope. Young professionals often describe Nigeria as a place where talent is stifled and dreams are deferred, whereas other countries offer a clearer pathway to personal growth and professional fulfilment.

The impact on families and communities is profound. While remittances from abroad have become a lifeline for many households, the emotional toll of separation cannot be overlooked. Parents are separated from children, communities lose vibrant youth, and the nation loses the very people it needs to build its future. The irony is that Nigeria spends significant resources training these professionals, only for them to contribute their expertise to foreign economies.

Economists warn that the long-term implications of unchecked brain drain are dire. A shrinking skilled workforce will stifle innovation, reduce productivity, and weaken critical sectors like health and education. Without urgent intervention by the government to check the migration, Nigeria risks becoming a nation heavily dependent on imported expertise, a situation capable of undermining its sovereignty and capacity to compete in a globalised world.

To stem the tide, experts suggest a multi-faceted approach. First, government must prioritise investment in education and healthcare, ensuring professionals are adequately remunerated and provided with conducive working environments. Second, policies that promote entrepreneurship and job creation must be strengthened to give young people reasons to stay. Third, restoring security and trust in governance will reduce the sense of hopelessness that drives people abroad. Finally, engaging the Nigerian diaspora in nation-building—through knowledge transfer, partnerships, and incentives—could turn the brain drain into a “brain gain.”

Ultimately, Nigeria cannot afford to keep losing its best minds. Every doctor that leaves is a potential life saver lost. Every teacher that relocates is a generation of students deprived. Every engineer or innovator that exits is a missed opportunity for growth. Unless urgent steps are taken, the “japa” wave may soon leave Nigeria with a hollowed-out workforce, making development dreams even harder to achieve. The country must act now, not just to stop the outflow, but to build a nation worth staying in.

Amos is a student of Mass Communication, University of Maiduguri.

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