Nigeria requires a minimum investment of $345 million (approximately ₦540 billion) every year for the next decade to successfully integrate its 15 million out-of-school children into the formal education system.
Dr. Tunji Alausa, the minister of Education, disclosed these figures during a high-level briefing, emphasizing that the Out-of-School Crisis has moved beyond a social issue into a significant threat to Nigeria’s long-term economic and digital stability.
The Magnitude of the Crisis
According to the latest UNESCO and Ministry of Education data, Nigeria currently hosts one of the world’s largest populations of children who are not enrolled in any formal learning institution.
- Total Count: Approximately 15 million children.
- Concentration: The crisis is most acute in the Northern regions, though urban centers in the South are seeing rising numbers due to internal displacement and economic hardship.
The Financial Roadmap: Breaking Down the $3.4 Billion 10-Year Plan
To achieve the Renewed Hope goal of zero out-of-school children by 2035, the Ministry has outlined a capital-intensive strategy that requires consistent annual funding.
Infrastructure Expansion ($150M/year): Building and renovating thousands of Smart Classrooms to accommodate the influx of new students.
Teacher Recruitment & Upskilling ($100M/year): Training a new generation of educators capable of delivering digital-age literacy and numeracy.
Incentive Programs ($95M/year): Implementing school feeding programs and conditional cash transfers to alleviate the opportunity cost for low-income families who rely on child labour.
Human Capital as a Digital Asset
Minister Alausa noted that the cost of not investing this $345 million is significantly higher. In a rapidly evolving global economy, 15 million unskilled youths represent a lost generation that cannot participate in the $1 trillion economy Nigeria aims to build.
“We are not just talking about classrooms; we are talking about the foundational skills required for the 21st-century workforce,” Alausa stated. “If we fail to formalize this education now, the cost of social insecurity and lost GDP in ten years will be ten times what we are asking for today.”
A Call for Public-Private Partnership (PPP)
Recognizing that the federal budget alone cannot sustain this ₦540 billion annual requirement, the government is calling on the private sector and international development partners, such as the World Bank and Global Partnership for Education, to bridge the funding gap.
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