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From N-power to colony of unemployment – Femi Oluwasanmi

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At the inception, the introduction of N-Power scheme stands out as one of the best policies of the Federal Government under President Muhammadu Buhari with a lot of graduates been engaged through the scheme aspiring to move to the assumed next level of the programme which was interpreted to be permanent employment or empowerment not knowing it is a rehearsal for the journey to the colony of unemployment.
On 30th June, 2020, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Diseaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Umar Farouq, announced the commencement of the disengagement of the batches A and B of the Npower volunteers which was completed in July without providing them exist package to start the business of their dreams after serving the nation for years.
The journey to this inglorious disengagement started with the transferred of the programme from the office of the Vice President to the Ministry in October 2019, with a view to better proffering pragmatic panacea to the ginormous disasters ravaging the country. Since then, the Minister, has insisted on the transition of the volunteers to the next level. This next level was widely interpreted as permanent employment or empowerment, particularly putting into consideration several promises made by the administration on job creation and poverty eradication, not knowing it is an opposite.
For instance, President Mohammadu Buhari during the 2015 general election campaign promised to create a million job annually and put an end to the suffering of the masses. This might have prompted the creation of the National Social Investment Programme (NSIP) in 2016 which includes N-power Scheme, Conditional Cash Transfer and others. While addressing the nation on June 12, 2019, the president hailed the programme and reiterated the commitment of his administration to uplift 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in the next 10 years.
Similarly, the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osibanjo had at several forums promised that the government will not allow the N-power volunteers to go back to the street empty handed. This seems to inform the delayed of the disengagement of the Batch A till June 30th, 2020. 
Though, some have argued that the delay is not because the government has any good plan for the volunteers but it was part of the gambits of the government to score political goals during the 2019 general election which seems to be playing out gradually with the transition of the two batches to the colony of unemployment at a time when most nations of the world are expanding their social investment scheme due to the hardship occasioned by COVID-19.
The same thing could be deduced from the statement issued by the Deputy Director (Information) of the ministry, Rhoda Ishaku Iliya on June 19, where she stated that the ministry has commenced the transitioning of beneficiaries from Batches A & B into government entrepreneurship schemes and engaging private sector bodies to absorb some of the beneficiaries after the completion of psychometric assessment to determine competency and placement into various opportunities which up till date yet to commenced.
Instead, what followed was the farewell message of the Minister to the beneficiaries on 30th June, where she congratulated them for transitioning to an undisclosed platform. This kind of statement inconsistency seems to be in contrast with the standard approach to managing disaster like unemployment which has become the second label of Nigeria in the comity of nations. Though, it also shows that the ministry knows the best thing to do but choices to disengage the volunteers to the saturated labour market without any tangible exist package. Prior to the disengagement, people from different quarters have urged the government not to return the volunteers back to the street empty handed especially looking at their impact on the moribund education system and other critical sectors in the country. 
To resonate this calls, some of the N-power volunteers took to the street to protest this plan and demanded a better exist package if permanency is no more visible as promised during the build up to the 2019 general election which received a counter response from the minister, who claimed that the federal government cannot afford to empower each volunteer with six hundred thousand naira (# 600, 000) as startup capital. 
To further persuade the minister, they took their protest to the national assembly and other institutions demanding their help but all efforts seem not yielded desired result as the national assembly which ought to be the voice of the masses is busy with “probing drama” like: is okay, is okay… operation please off the mic…! While the issue of cession of sovereignty clues to China, increment in the fine on hate speech among others continue to lead discussion in the media leaving the root of the crisis unaddressed. The base of the majority of the crises plaguing Nigeria today is poverty and illiteracy. Poverty has taken over the nation. In fact, many homes are at the verge of collapse because of hunger while the numbers of children out school continue to increase astronomically.
This is likely to increase with the disengagement of these volunteers. Most volunteers who struggle to extend the hands of love to their relatives from their monthly stipend have now graduated to “full time unemployment college” where they will have to be tutored by those that used to depend on them on how to manage chronic poverty. Yet, the Minister claimed at the anniversary of her Ministry on 21st August, that “they are gratified to note that through N-Power they have achieved a net lowering of the youth unemployment figures despite population growth”.
How this is done through the replacement of five hundred thousand (500, 000) volunteers with four hundred thousand (400,000) prospective volunteers yet to be selected from the 5 millions applicants who are victims of the “man-made poverty” that have clouded the nation’s atmosphere is still a mystery that needs the best analyst from the magical world to unravel. No wonder, the statistics of unemployed hands continue to increase despite the existence of NSIP and “operation next level”.
Just of recent, the National Bureau Statistics (NBS) claims in her 2020 2nd quarter reports that the unemployment rate has increased to 27.1 percent as against 23.1 percent released in the 3rd quarter of 2018 report. While the statistics of underemployment rate has jumped from 20.1 percent to 28.1 percent in the latest report. This might likely increase in the 3rd quarter report due to this disengagement.
In 2018, the World Poverty Clock declared Nigeria the poverty capital of the world. While in 2019, stated that 92 millions of the nation’s population now lives in extreme poverty.
Though, the government rejected the report and claimed to be doing its best to make poverty a thing of the past. But with the recent disengagement of the 500, 000 N-power volunteers the nation is likely to receive a similar award this year again.
President Buhari, had said in one of his responses to COVID-19 that plenty people are likely to lose their job this year due to COVID-19 which has finally come to pass with the league of the N-
power volunteers now suffocating due to the shock of disengagement at the Golgotha of unemployment caused by the incentivity of the minister to the reality on ground. However, to disengaged batches A and B respectfully is not a bad idea because it is a shameful thing for a nation like Nigeria greatly blessed with both human and natural resources to be servicing unemployment with #30,000 per month, but it is inhuman to disengaged them to the saturated labour market after years of service without providing them startup capiital knowing full well that some of them are now fathers and mothers.
Though, the minister claimed in her anniversary speech that “about 109,823 beneficiaries from Batches A and B of the N-Power scheme had gone on to set up businesses in their communities” but failed to explain where they got their start up capital from. Or, whether they are related to Ramon Abass (aka, Hushpuppi) who claimed to be estate manager mainwhile engaging in international fraud. People would have continued to celebrate Hushpuppi the way the minister is celebrating the so-called investors if he was not caught in Dubai for doing dubious business.
Just of recent, Madam Alison-Madueke who has been given the title of “Hushmummy” because of the number of alleged cases of corruption levelled against her stated that Yahoo Yahoo boys are role models people are respecting in Nigeria. This might be funny but with the numbers of those that suddenly became employers of labour overnight with #30, 000 stipends per month, the woman might not be far from reality.
In Nigeria, most people don’t ask questions on where people got their money from which the Honourable Minister seems to be among, because, when about 109,823 out of 500, 000 volunteers who ought to be going to their Place of Primary Assignment (PPA) regularly out of their #30, 000 monthly stipend without transportation allowance and other allowances like the ones attached to the office of the minister suddenly became employers of labour overnight then, there is need for magician to unravel the mystery. Therefore, it’s time the government look at this disengegment and do the needful by either giving the volunteers permanent employment or empowerment so that the nation will not just be servicing and recycling unemployment all in the name of photo shoot, media consumption, programmes count and others which negate the real meaning of change and next level mantras of a Progressive Congress.
Oluwasanmi wrote from Ogun State.
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Opinion

Innovation without accountability is just experimentation – Emelia Sunday-Edet

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These days, everything is called innovation. Governments talk about it in speeches. Startups promise it in pitch decks. Investors say they are funding it. Across Africa’s tech ecosystem, the word shows up everywhere. Yet one question often goes unexamined: who benefits from innovation, and who bears the cost when it fails?Because innovation without accountability is not really innovation, it’s experimentation. And experimentation becomes dangerous when the systems being tested are the same ones millions of people depend on. In my work testing software systems, I’ve learned that the problems that cause the biggest failures are rarely dramatic ones. They are small issues no one thought were serious—until the system scaled. Technology ecosystems are not very different.The rush to move fast. Anyone who follows the tech world knows the mantra: move fast, launch quickly, figure things out later.That approach has produced some remarkable companies. But it has also produced platforms that grew so quickly that no one really understood their consequences until much later. Africa’s technology sector is beginning to move at that same pace.New payment apps appear every year. Digital lending platforms promise instant credit. Logistics startups claim they can reinvent commerce. Some of these ideas will succeed. Many won’t. The real concern is not failure. Failure is part of building things.The real concern is when systems scale before anyone asks whether they are safe, fair, or sustainable.We’ve seen this before. A startup runs a successful campaign, user numbers surge, and the very success it hoped for becomes its biggest challenge. Systems slow down. Support queues grow. Security gaps become visible. What looked stable under normal conditions struggles under pressure.Scale has a way of revealing problems that were always present but easy to ignore.Growth Reveals WeaknessesPeople who build and manage systems- engineers, product managers, quality assurance professionals, developers, and executives, learn one lesson quickly: small problems grow when systems grow. A bug affecting a few users is annoying. The same bug affecting millions becomes a crisis.Technology ecosystems work similarly. When financial platforms expand too quickly without strong safeguards, the risks spread just as quickly.Users rarely see the early warning signs. By the time the problems surface, the platform may already be embedded in everyday life. At that point, fixing things becomes harder.When responsibility fadesAnother strange feature of the tech world is how easily responsibility disappears.When something goes wrong, everyone seems slightly removed from the decision. The startup says it only built the tool. The investor says they only funded the company. The platform says the system behaved as designed. Yet systems don’t design themselves.Behind every platform are choices about incentives, trade-offs, and acceptable levels of risk. Those choices shape who benefits from the technology and who carries the downside when things break.Too often, the people carrying the consequences are the users who had no role in making those decisions.Building Systems That LastRegulators across Africa face a difficult position. Move too aggressively and you risk choking innovation before it has a chance to grow. Move too slowly and fragile systems can spread before anyone understands the risks. But framing the issue as innovation versus regulation misses the point.The real goal should be innovation that lasts. The systems that endure are rarely the fastest ones. They are the ones built with enough care that they can survive mistakes, scale responsibly, and adapt when things go wrong.Let’s Redefine InnovationIt’s tempting to measure innovation by how quickly a product launches or how much venture capital a startup raises. But those metrics are temporary. A product can launch in months. Funding rounds can make headlines overnight. Neither tells us much about whether the system will actually work when people begin to depend on it.A better test of innovation is simpler: does the system hold up over time? Does it still work when millions of people rely on it every day? When something breaks, is someone responsible for fixing it? And does the system genuinely make life better, or does it quietly introduce new risks along the way?If those questions cannot be answered confidently, then what we are seeing is not innovation. It is experimentation.Societies can recover from failed experiments. They struggle much more when those experiments become critical infrastructure before anyone has tested their limits.

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Can Nigeria Become Africa’s Crypto Hub? Bidemi Oke

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The most important question about Nigeria’s crypto future is not whether Nigerians love crypto. We already know they do.The real question is this: What if widespread crypto adoption is actually the least important requirement for becoming Africa’s crypto hub?That sounds counterintuitive. After all, Nigeria consistently ranks among the world’s most active crypto markets. Millions of young people use digital assets for payments, savings, remittances and investments. Venture capital continues to flow into blockchain-related businesses. Local talent is building products that serve users across multiple continents.Yet history offers an uncomfortable lesson. The places that become industry hubs are rarely the places with the highest consumption. They are the places with the strongest systems.Hollywood did not become the centre of global entertainment because Americans watched the most films. Silicon Valley did not emerge because Californians used the most computers. London did not become a financial powerhouse because Britons loved banking more than everyone else.They became hubs because they built ecosystems. That distinction matters.Many conversations about Nigeria’s crypto future focus on adoption metrics. How many users? How many wallets? How many transactions? How much trading volume?Those numbers are impressive, but they can also be misleading. Consumption creates activity. Ecosystems create dominance.If Nigeria truly wants to become Africa’s crypto hub, it must think beyond adoption and focus on what I call the “Hub Equation”: Talent + Capital + Regulation + Infrastructure.Most countries succeed in one or two of these areas. Very few succeed in all four simultaneously.Nigeria’s greatest advantage is talent. Across blockchain development, product design, cybersecurity, engineering and digital entrepreneurship, Nigerian professionals are increasingly visible on the global stage. Many of the most innovative crypto products serving African users are being designed, built or scaled by Nigerians.The second advantage is market depth. A large population, strong entrepreneurial culture and persistent demand for alternative financial solutions create conditions that are difficult to replicate elsewhere on the continent. Markets matter because they provide the testing ground where products evolve from ideas into viable businesses.However, talent and demand alone do not create hubs. The remaining two variables, regulation and infrastructure, often determine whether innovation stays, scales or leaves.This is where the conversation becomes more nuanced. A common assumption is that innovation thrives when governments simply “stay out of the way”. In reality, investors rarely commit significant capital to environments characterised by uncertainty. The world’s leading innovation centres did not emerge from regulatory absence. They emerged from regulatory clarity.The lesson is not that crypto should be heavily controlled. The lesson is that predictable rules attract serious builders. Founders can adapt to regulation. What they struggle to adapt to is unpredictability.Infrastructure presents a similar challenge. Reliable digital identity systems, efficient payment rails, cybersecurity standards, institutional custody solutions and scalable internet connectivity are often less exciting than token launches or market rallies. Yet these foundations determine whether an industry can mature beyond speculation.This reveals a useful way to think about Nigeria’s opportunity. The race to become Africa’s crypto hub is not a technology race. It is a coordination race. The winning country will not necessarily be the one with the most traders, the most social media conversations or even the most start-ups.It will be the country that aligns entrepreneurs, regulators, investors and institutions around a shared vision of long-term value creation. Nigeria is arguably closer to that position than many observers realise. The talent exists. The demand exists. The entrepreneurial energy exists.What remains is the deliberate construction of the systems that transform activity into leadership.The future of crypto in Africa will not be determined by who adopts the technology first.It will be determined by who builds the environment where innovation can compound.And if Nigeria understands that distinction, it may discover that becoming Africa’s crypto hub is not primarily a crypto challenge, it is a nation-building challenge.About the AuthorBidemi Oke is the Chief Executive Officer of FlashChange, a fintech platform focused on secure digital asset exchange. He is an entrepreneur and vibrant leader, recognised for driving innovation and redefining access in the financial technology industry.

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Communication that make your fintech brand stand out – John Kokome

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In today’s crowded fintech ecosystem, building a great product is no longer enough. Across markets from Lagos to London and San Francisco, dozens of startups are solving similar problems in payments, remittances, digital banking, and wealth management. What truly separates the winners from the also-rans is not just innovation, but communication. In fintech, how you say what you do can be as important as what you actually do.At its core, fintech operates at the intersection of money and trust. Unlike social media or entertainment platforms, users are not just sharing photos or watching videos; they are entrusting companies with their livelihoods. This makes communication a strategic asset, not a support function. The brands that stand out are those that communicate with clarity, consistency, and credibility traditionally associated with banks, while retaining the agility of startups.First, clarity is non-negotiable. Fintech products can be inherently complex, think blockchain infrastructure, algorithmic trading, or cross-border settlements. Yet, the most successful brands translate complexity into simplicity. They speak the language of their users, not that of engineers. Whether it is a mobile app onboarding flow or a CEO’s public statement, every touch point must answer a simple question: “What does this mean for me?” Brands that fail here risk alienating the very audience they seek to serve.Second, consistency builds recognition and recall. A fintech brand must sound the same across all channels, its app notifications, social media posts, investor updates, and customer support interactions. This is where many startups falter. In their rush to scale, they adopt fragmented voices that confuse users. Consistency does not mean rigidity; it means coherence. It ensures that whether a user encounters your brand on X or through an email alert, the experience feels familiar and trustworthy.Third, credibility is the currency of fintech communication. Trust is not claimed; it is earned. This requires transparency, especially in moments of crisis. Downtime, security breaches, or regulatory challenges are inevitable. What differentiates strong brands is not the absence of these issues, but how they communicate during them. Honest, timely, and accountable communication can turn a potential reputational crisis into an opportunity to reinforce trust. Silence or spin, on the other hand, can be fatal.Moreover, fintech brands must embrace thought leadership as a communication strategy. In a rapidly evolving space, users and stakeholders are looking for guidance. By offering insights on trends such as digital currencies, financial inclusion, or regulatory developments, companies position themselves as more than service providers; they become voices of authority. This not only builds brand equity but also shapes industry narratives.Equally important is localisation. A one-size-fits-all communication strategy rarely works in diverse markets. What resonates in Nigeria may not necessarily appeal in Europe or North America. Cultural nuances, economic realities, and regulatory environments all influence how messages are received. Fintech brands that invest in understanding local contexts, and reflect this in their communication gain a significant competitive edge.Finally, authenticity is the differentiator that ties everything together. In an era of scepticism, users can quickly detect when a brand is being disingenuous. Authentic communication is not about perfection; it is about honesty and relatability. It is about showing the human side of a brand, its values, its mission, and even its challenges.The fintech landscape will only become more competitive in the years ahead. New entrants will continue to emerge, armed with capital and cutting-edge technology. But technology alone will not guarantee success. The brands that will endure are those that recognise communication as a core pillar of their strategy.In the end, fintech is not just about financial transactions; it is about relationships. And like all relationships, it is built on trust, nurtured through consistent engagement, and sustained by meaningful communication. Brands that understand this will not just stand out, they will stand the test of time.

John Kokome is the Corporate Communications Manager at FlashChange, a fintech platform redefining secure digital asset exchange. With experience across fintech, cryptocurrency, telecoms, and development communications in Africa. He currently leads strategic storytelling, reputation management, and stakeholder engagement initiatives at the company, focusing on building trust, transparency, and financial literacy in the digital assets space. John’s work sits at the intersection of policy, technology, and public perception, with a strong emphasis on Africa-first narratives and responsible innovation. He has contributed opinion pieces and thought leadership articles on governance, youth empowerment, branding, and Nigeria’s evolving digital economy.

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