Tinubu’s UK visit has zero benefit for Nigerians, says Chatham House expert

Leena Koni Hoffmann, an associate fellow in the Africa Programme at Chatham House, a London-based world-leading independent policy institute, has lamented rising poverty and food crisis in Nigeria.
She dismissed President Bola Tinubu’s recent Royal visit to the UK as mere diplomatic engagement without “concrete benefits” for ordinary Nigerians.
Ms Hoffmann, a top official at the globally renowned policy institute, analysed Mr Tinubu’s high-profile diplomatic engagements and the prevailing realities in Africa’s populous country in a publication on Saturday.
“The Nigerian president’s visit to the UK was his latest high-profile foreign policy moment on the world stage. But Tinubu’s diplomatic engagements have not produced concrete benefits for ordinary Nigerians,” Ms Hoffmann wrote.
She argued that though “Tinubu’s administration has also sought international validation for its key domestic reforms–fuel subsidy removal, naira devaluation and tax reform, his prominent international profile has not delivered material gains to Nigerians in the past three years of his government.
“But nearly three years into Tinubu’s presidency, the key question is whether this visibility-driven foreign policy has delivered domestic gains. So far, the president’s prominent international profile has not largely translated into improvements in material conditions for most Nigerians,” Ms Hoffmann said.
While Mr Tinubu’s government cites various policy achievements as proof of success, the Chatham House official said, “Poverty remains high, food insecurity has risen, household spending remains weak, and credit remains expensive for small firms.”
She added, “Growth is concentrated in capital-intensive sectors such as finance and ICT, while agriculture remains constrained by insecurity and structural bottlenecks. Nigeria’s deficits in education, skills and health are having a more negative impact on future earnings than in other comparable economies.”
According to Ms Hoffmann, Mr Tinubu’s London visit will likely focus on leveraging the UK-Nigeria ETIP to attract investment in energy, infrastructure, technology and services–sectors where UK firms are competitive.
She said, however, that any potential investments are unlikely to fix Nigeria’s struggling economy or reverse the structural drivers of migration, such as rampant insecurity and weak public services.
When contacted by Peoples Gazette, Daniel Bwala, special adviser to Mr Tinubu on policy communication, argued that Mr Tinubu’s visit to the UK was just two days ago and needs time to produce concrete benefits for Nigerians.
“If not for the ignorance of the writer, he should have known that the visit was just two days ago, it needs time to show the concrete benefit; but we already have one on the ground at the time of the visit, which is the loan for the rehabilitation of the two sea ports in Lagos. Some writers write before they think,” Mr Bwala said.
We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.
More from Peoples Gazette

Agriculture
FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology
The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Politics
Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku
“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Abuja
Tinubu promises clean water supply to FCT area councilsÂ
The president commended the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, for his fiscal discipline, political will and deep love for residents of the territory.

Africa
Uganda seeks sustained international support in Ebola response
Mr Baryomunsi thanked the partners for their support in helping Uganda bring its Ebola outbreak under control since it was declared on May 15.

World
Bangladesh retains death penalty for online drug trafficking
The law also provides for the creation of special tribunals to handle drug-related cases in high-risk areas.

Education
Tinubu seeks NANS’ collaboration to promote education sector
The president commended the peaceful transition in NANS leadership.

Lagos
Residents seek urgent intervention on poor sanitation at Ikorodu garage
Mr Bello called for stricter enforcement of the Thursday market sanitation in the area.

NationWide
Gaming expert highlights demerits of Sony’s proposed digital-only production
Sony said from January 2028, new games would be available on the PlayStation Store and at retailers in digital formats only.





