Women-owned businesses are quietly becoming the backbone of Nigeria’s informal economy, and a new partnership between the Renewed Hope Initiative (RHI) and the Tony Elumelu Foundation is accelerating that trend. In Kogi State, 500 women traders and entrepreneurs have just received ₦50,000 each — not as charity, but as seed capital to expand their businesses, stabilize household incomes, and power local commerce.
Unlike traditional welfare programmes, this initiative frames women as drivers of growth. “We want to see women not just survive, but thrive as entrepreneurs,” said Senator Oluremi Tinubu, Nigeria’s First Lady and founder of RHI.
A Shift from Dependence to Enterprise
The scheme represents a larger ambition: 18,500 women across Nigeria will benefit from ₦1 billion in funding committed by the Tony Elumelu Foundation, a long-standing champion of African entrepreneurship. By focusing on women-led ventures, the programme recognizes a proven truth — money in the hands of women multiplies its impact in families, education, and community development.
Building a New Entrepreneurial Culture
More than funding, the initiative signals a mindset shift. Women who often operate in vulnerable, informal spaces are now being positioned as micro-entrepreneurs with the potential to scale. As Kogi State’s Secretary to Government, Dr. Folashade Ayoade, noted, the challenge is not just giving money but creating pathways to turn small grants into sustainable enterprises.
Private-Sector Collaboration as a Model
The partnership with the Tony Elumelu Foundation underscores a powerful model of philanthropy-meets-policy. While government provides the platform and legitimacy, private capital ensures efficiency and impact. This blend could become a template for future grassroots development in Nigeria — particularly at a time when SMEs account for more than 80% of employment but often lack access to financing.
Beyond Grants: The Bigger Picture
Experts argue that small-ticket financing like this is the first step toward creating an ecosystem where women can graduate from micro-traders into established business owners. With follow-up mentorship, digital inclusion, and market access, beneficiaries can scale far beyond subsistence trading.
The voices from Lokoja echo that hope. “This money means I can finally grow my shop beyond survival level,” said one beneficiary, her words capturing the entrepreneurial hunger that such programmes are unlocking.
Why It Matters
At its core, the Renewed Hope Initiative isn’t just a women’s empowerment scheme — it is an economic growth strategy. By putting capital in the hands of women who already understand the discipline of trade, it is seeding the next generation of resilient, community-focused entrepreneurs.
In a country battling unemployment and economic uncertainty, the move is a reminder that nation-building can start with empowering one woman, one business, and one community at a time.