Pune Media

Nigeria’s education paradox: Bigger budgets, poorer outcomes

Generated image

Nigeria has nearly tripled its education spending in five years, but outcomes remain flat. Budget allocations rose from N602 billion in 2019 to N1.59 trillion in 2024, yet classrooms are still overcrowded, proficiency stagnant, and millions of children out of school.

Analysts warn that much of the funding is absorbed by salaries and recurrent costs, leaving little for the infrastructure, teacher training, and digital tools that directly improve learning.

In 2019, Abuja allocated N602 bn (about $1.65 bn) to education. By 2023, the figure had nearly doubled to N1.05 tn ($2.73 bn), according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). In 2024, the education budget was N1.59 tn.

Read also: Nigeria’s education reform: Local models leading a 21st-century skills revolution 

For 2025, President Bola Tinubu proposed a headline allocation of N3.52 trillion out of N54.99 trillion, which equates to roughly 6.4 percent of total spending far short of global standards.

“The budget tells you where a country’s heart is,” said Tunde Adeoye, a Lagos-based development economist. “And Nigeria’s heart is clearly not in education.”

Falling behind peers

The numbers underline the gap. Nigeria spends between six and seven percent of its budget on education. Egypt devotes roughly 12 percent, South Africa nine percent, and Kenya eight percent, according to World Bank data. In absolute terms, South Africa spent $28.1 billion on education in 2023, Egypt $18 billion, and Kenya $6.3 billion far above Nigeria’s $2.7 billion outlay, despite its far larger population.

Salaries over schools

Where Nigeria does spend, most of it is absorbed by salaries and stipends. Personnel costs swallowed more than 65 percent of the 2024 education budget, leaving just 30 percent for capital projects such as new classrooms, laboratories and digital learning infrastructure. In contrast, Egypt channels nearly 40 percent of its education spend into infrastructure, and Kenya about 35 percent.

“Paying teachers is vital,” said Yusuf Oladehinde, an education consultant in Lagos, “but without investment in facilities, overcrowding, poor materials and absent technology will continue to undermine learning.”

Parents are voting with their wallets. “I would like my children to attend public secondary school, but infrastructural gaps and overcrowded classrooms discourage me,” said Akeem Ayinde, a father in Ogun State. “So, I have to work and earn money at all costs to send them to private school.”

Read also: Out-of-school children, underfunding slow Nigeria’s education progress

Stagnant outcomes

Despite higher allocations, student achievement remains stubbornly weak. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) data show that only 36 percent of Nigerian primary school pupils achieved minimum proficiency in literacy and numeracy in 2022 the same as in 2019. Kenya and South Africa scored 57 percent and 52 percent respectively.

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s out-of-school population is swelling. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimates 18.5m Nigerian children were out of school by late 2024 about 15 percent of the global total.

A decade of decline

The long-term trend is stark. In 2015, education accounted for 10.75 percent of Nigeria’s national budget. By 2025, that share had slid to 5.47 percent. The mismatch between political rhetoric and hard budget numbers has deepened scepticism about government priorities.

The road to reform

Analysts argue that Nigeria must not only increase the size of its education budget but also reallocate spending. Capital investment should rise to at least 40 percent of total allocations, targeting classrooms, teacher training, and digital infrastructure. Regular national assessments of literacy, numeracy and digital skills could provide a clearer measure of progress.

Accountability is just as important as money, analysts say. Education budgets are often underutilised or diverted. “Without stricter oversight by parliament, civil society and anti-graft agencies, even larger allocations may fail to translate into better outcomes,” an Lagos-based expert said.

Civil society groups and unions have been pushing for reforms. In 2023, the Academic Staff Union of Universities launched a national campaign for higher funding and greater autonomy. Yet, fiscal pressures and competing priorities have slowed progress.

Read also: Broken education system threatens tomorrow’s jobs

At stake

For Tinubu’s government, the challenge is not how much Nigeria spends, but how it spends it. Without stronger oversight and greater capital investment, rising allocations will keep missing their mark. The danger is clear: a fast-growing youth population shuts out of opportunity, and an economy unready for a knowledge-driven future.

Unless Nigeria matches money with strategy, it risks raising a generation unfit for the demands ahead, experts say.



Images are for reference only.Images and contents gathered automatic from google or 3rd party sources.All rights on the images and contents are with their legal original owners.

Aggregated From –

Comments are closed.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More