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Migration, Talent Drain And Africa’s Future Of Work -By Vanessa Emeadi

This calls for urgency, not only in addressing migration but in reimagining the conditions that make Africans feel they have no choice but to leave. Enabling environments must be created through investments in infrastructure, transparent and fair systems for digital work, streamlined cross‑border payment frameworks, and policies that reward talent locally. African nations must also leverage diaspora networks intentionally, turning a historic challenge into an opportunity for circular migration, knowledge exchange, and collaborative development.

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Vanessa Emeadi

Japa has become not just a catchy term for migration but a fervent prayer and dream‑come‑true moment for many Africans searching for better opportunities. Across Nigeria and beyond, millions of young professionals are asking themselves whether the future they want is even possible where they are. A recent report by Afrobarometer found that 56 % of Nigerians have seriously considered relocating abroad, up sharply from 36 % in 2017, a clear reflection of the intensifying frustration with local conditions.

At the start of the COVID‑19 recovery period, mobility data showed growth in applications for study and work visas, particularly among Nigerians headed to Europe and North America. Between 2019 and 2021, for example, the number of study visas and skilled work issued by the UK to Nigerians increased by over 400% and 161% respectively, illustrating both intent and capacity among young Africans to leave in pursuit of greener pastures.

The impact of this mass movement is clear in public discourse. Social media timelines are filled with testimonials from professionals in healthcare, engineering, and technology, all leaving for countries offering steadier incomes, better infrastructure, and more predictable futures. For Africa’s digital economy, this migration represents more than a simple reduction in talent, it is a direct drain on economic potential, as skills that could drive local innovation, entrepreneurship, and value creation are instead utilised in foreign markets that provide a more enabling environment.

A clear example of this trend is visible in Nigeria’s healthcare sector. Thousands of Nigerian-trained doctors have relocated to the UK in recent years, driven by better pay, working conditions, and access to modern medical infrastructure. According to data from the General Medical Council, over 12,000 Nigerian doctors were registered to practise in the UK as of 2023, making Nigeria one of the largest sources of foreign-trained doctors in the country. While this creates opportunities for the individuals involved, it leaves significant gaps in Nigeria’s healthcare system, where doctor-to-patient ratios are already critically low.

A closer look at Nigeria’s economic viability following major reforms and rising costs from 2023 into 2025 highlights the challenges confronting organisations as they struggle to sustain operations. This has resulted in closures and layoffs across key sectors, weakening job security and driving up the cost of living, prompting many professionals to seek stability and opportunity abroad.

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From the 2024 annual report of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) Nigeria, the number of Nigerians living abroad has reached approximately 2.1 million. These emigrants sent around $21 billion in remittances back home, one of the highest flows in Sub‑Saharan Africa. While these remittances provide important financial support for households and the economy, the departure of skilled professionals continues to strain critical sectors such as healthcare, education, science, and technology, hollowing out the very human capital it needs to build resilient, inclusive economies.

For Nigeria’s digital workers, the challenge goes beyond opportunity scarcity. Wage disparities with global markets mean that even when online work is available, the economic rewards are unequal. Compounding this are delayed and inefficient payment systems that make it harder for Nigerian professionals to receive earnings from international clients, alongside currency depreciation that erodes their purchasing power. Geographic restrictions on platforms, limited collaborative policy frameworks, and difficulties with cross‑border financial flows further hinder digital participation.

These economic barriers are exacerbated by everyday infrastructural struggles that make digital work burdensome, if not prohibitive, such as poor and expensive internet and frequent power outages, forcing professionals to spend more just to stay connected and productive.

Crucially, research shows that those leaving often do so not out of desire but out of necessity, responding to poor living conditions, limited systems of support, and the absence of pathways for sustainable careers in their home countries. This “push” dynamic is reinforced by “pull” factors in destination countries offering higher salaries, better working conditions, and clearer paths to professional growth, especially in technology, healthcare, and academia.

This calls for urgency, not only in addressing migration but in reimagining the conditions that make Africans feel they have no choice but to leave. Enabling environments must be created through investments in infrastructure, transparent and fair systems for digital work, streamlined cross‑border payment frameworks, and policies that reward talent locally. African nations must also leverage diaspora networks intentionally, turning a historic challenge into an opportunity for circular migration, knowledge exchange, and collaborative development.

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Only when the choice to leave is balanced by genuine opportunities at home can the continent aspire not simply to participate in the global economy but to shape it, ensuring that Africans who stay, those who leave, and those who engage from afar all see Africa as a place worth investing their time, talent and future in.

This publication was funded by Africa No Filter. The findings and conclusions contained within are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions or policies of Africa No Filter.

 

About Vanessa Emeadi

Vanessa Emeadi is a Media and Communications Specialist and storyteller passionate about youth advocacy, community development, and the future of work in Africa.

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