The Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) has announced the appointment of Mrs. Surayyah Ahmad as a Director on its Board. The decision, approved during the private sector policy group’s second-quarter board meeting and confirmed via an official statement signed by Chief Executive Officer Dr. Tayo Aduloju, targets the acceleration of private sector-led transformation and inclusive growth across Nigeria.
The boardroom appointment directly leverages Mrs. Ahmad’s cross-border expertise in impact investing, gender-lens finance, and early-stage SME venture scaling. This background aligns with the group’s ongoing evidence-based advocacy to bridge sub-regional financing gaps.
1. Operationalizing the $300m Youth Entrepreneurship Investment Bank
A key element of Mrs. Ahmad’s structural mandate is her role leading the deployment of the Youth Entrepreneurship Investment Bank (YEIB Investment Funds). The $300 million blended capital vehicle was conceptualized by the African Development Bank (AfDB) to fix systemic credit constraints that exclude early-stage founders from traditional banking networks.
The YEIB structure pools sovereign and development financing through a joint ownership framework:
-
The African Development Bank (AfDB): Serves as the primary international sponsor, providing structural concessional financing and technical assistance frameworks.
-
The Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA): Provides domestic co-investment capital, ensuring the fund is aligned with long-term sovereign infrastructure priorities.
-
The Development Bank of Nigeria (DBN): Manages wholesale liquidity flows, enabling tier-1 and tier-2 local commercial finance intermediaries to disburse credit securely.
2. Specialized Impact Credentials and Professional Profile
The incoming director brings a strong background in global finance and hands-on entrepreneurial experience to the policy group:
| Institutional Competency Milestone | Academic & Enterprise Governance Platform |
| MBA (Finance & Impact Investing) | University of Oxford |
| Founding Partner Portfolio | Sabou Capital (West & Central African SME gender-lens allocator) |
| Board Governance Chair | Laidlaw Foundation Women in Business Board |
| International Commerce Asset | Founded and successfully exited a cross-border e-commerce firm (Nigeria/UK) |
During her time at Oxford, she also served as Co-Chair of the Oxford Africa Business Alliance, building strategic trade and investment links between international capital allocators and African enterprises.
3. Mitigating Nigeria’s Macroeconomic Vulnerabilities
The appointment comes at a crucial time for the NESG as it navigates complex macroeconomic issues, including rising sovereign debt and inflation. The group recently projected a 5.5 per cent GDP growth target for Nigeria, provided current structural reforms remain steady.
By integrating Mrs. Ahmad into its leadership team, the think tank aims to convert youth population metrics into a measurable economic advantage. This strategy focuses on expanding retail and wholesale financing structures to turn small scale enterprises into sustainable engines for job creation and industrial growth.
