By Prof. Chiwuike Uba, Ph.D.
On a humid evening in Lagos, a young medical doctor boards a flight to the United Kingdom. She is not unemployed. She is not without prospects. In fact, by Nigerian standards, she is doing reasonably well. Yet, as she takes her seat, what she is leaving behind is not just a country, but a system she no longer trusts to reward her effort, protect her rights, or guarantee her future. Her story is no longer exceptional. It has become emblematic of a wider national moment.
In contemporary Nigeria, japa has moved from slang to structure. It is no longer a temporary response to hardship; it is a patterned outcome of deeper systemic realities. What makes this phenomenon particularly striking is the profile of those leaving. Increasingly, migration is driven not only by the economically vulnerable, but by professionals, entrepreneurs, and skilled workers who, on paper, should have reasons to stay. This alone disrupts the convenient narrative that migration is simply a function of poverty or unemployment.
To be sure, economic pressures are real. Inflation has eroded purchasing power, the naira has experienced sustained volatility, and real incomes have declined across sectors. Yet, these factors do not fully explain why individuals with relative economic stability are willing to accept uncertain futures abroad, sometimes in roles considered less prestigious. The more compelling explanation lies in the difference between earning a living and living within a system that works. Increasingly, Nigerians are not merely chasing higher wages; they are seeking predictability, institutional coherence, and a sense of control over their lives.
Empirical indicators reinforce the structural nature of this shift. Over the past few years, countries such as the United Kingdom and Canada have witnessed a sharp rise in visa applications and approvals from Nigerians, particularly under skilled worker and study routes. The healthcare sector provides a vivid illustration. Thousands of Nigerian doctors and nurses have migrated in recent years, contributing to domestic shortages even as they fill critical gaps abroad. At the same time, remittance inflows into Nigeria have remained robust, running into billions of dollars annually, underscoring both the scale of outward migration and the continued economic ties migrants maintain with their home country. These are not isolated movements; they are systemic flows.
From a political economy perspective, japa represents a rational response to institutional fragility. Drawing from Hirschman’s framework of exit and voice, citizens confronted with persistent governance deficits often choose between attempting to reform the system or withdrawing from it. In Nigeria, the efficacy of “voice” has been weakened over time by declining trust in institutions, perceptions of elite capture, and inconsistent policy environments. When citizens begin to doubt that their participation can meaningfully influence outcomes, “exit” becomes the more rational option. Migration, in this sense, functions as a quiet but powerful referendum on the state of governance.
This reality also reflects a deeper rupture in the psychological contract between citizens and the state. Beyond formal policies and institutions, there exists an implicit expectation that effort will be met with opportunity, that competence will be rewarded, and that the state will provide a baseline of security and fairness. When this contract is repeatedly violated, the consequences are not only economic but emotional and civic. People begin to disengage. Migration then becomes more than a physical relocation; it becomes a withdrawal of belief.
The sociological dimension further illuminates this shift. A growing segment of Nigerians, particularly among the youth and middle class, increasingly values meritocracy, structure, and institutional fairness. Exposure to global standards through education, technology, and social networks has recalibrated expectations. When local realities fail to match these expectations, a sense of aspirational dislocation emerges. Individuals no longer see a clear pathway between their ambitions and their environment. The decision to leave, therefore, is not simply about escaping hardship; it is about seeking alignment between effort, aspiration, and outcome.
Within this context, dismissive narratives about migrants taking up care work, factory roles, or service jobs abroad reveal a profound misunderstanding of modern labour systems. In many destination countries, these roles are embedded within structured environments that guarantee labour rights, enforce contracts, and provide opportunities for advancement. The dignity attached to such work is not derived solely from status, but from the reliability and fairness of the system. What appears, from a distance, as occupational downgrading is often experienced by migrants as an upgrade in terms of personal security, respect, and long-term opportunity.
Nigeria’s experience is not entirely unique. Countries like the Philippines have, over time, institutionalized labour migration as part of their economic strategy, leveraging diaspora remittances and networks to support domestic development. India, similarly, has benefited from a highly engaged diaspora that contributes investment, knowledge, and global connectivity. The difference lies not in the existence of migration, but in how it is managed and integrated into national development strategies. In Nigeria’s case, migration remains largely reactive rather than strategic, driven more by push factors than by deliberate policy design.
There is, however, an undeniable cost. The continuous outflow of skilled labour weakens critical sectors such as healthcare, education, and technology. Hospitals struggle to retain staff, universities face capacity constraints, and industries lose experienced professionals. This erosion of human capital has long-term implications for productivity and innovation. Yet, the picture is not entirely bleak. The Nigerian diaspora represents a powerful reservoir of capital, skills, and networks. Remittances provide a steady inflow of foreign exchange, while diaspora professionals often contribute to knowledge transfer and investment. The central challenge, therefore, is not migration itself, but the conditions that make migration the default aspiration rather than one of several viable choices.
It is important to engage with the counterargument that citizens have a civic responsibility to remain and contribute to national development. While this perspective carries moral weight, it overlooks a critical reality. Commitment to nation-building is difficult to sustain in environments where systems consistently undermine effort and reward. Patriotism cannot be legislated, nor can it be sustained by rhetoric alone. Functional systems, not moral appeals, are what retain talent. Where institutions work, people stay. Where they do not, people leave.
Public rhetoric, in this regard, matters significantly. When migration is framed dismissively or condescendingly by those in positions of authority, it deepens the disconnect between the state and its citizens. It signals not only a lack of empathy, but also a failure to engage with the structural drivers of migration. Such narratives risk trivializing legitimate concerns and, in doing so, further erode trust.
Ultimately, japa is less about departure and more about direction. It reflects a movement toward environments where systems function, rights are protected, and dignity is embedded within institutional frameworks. Nigeria stands at a crossroads. One path leads to the continued export of its most valuable resource, its people, driven by unresolved structural challenges. The other path requires deliberate institutional reform, policy consistency, and a renewed commitment to building systems that inspire confidence.
The choice between these futures is not abstract. It will be determined by the extent to which governance can align with the expectations of its citizens. Until then, the steady stream of departures will continue to tell a story that statistics alone cannot fully capture. People are not leaving because they lack attachment to Nigeria. They are leaving because they are searching for a system that reflects the value they know they carry.