Nigeria’s private sector stakeholders are calling for a national rethink on how the country protects those who drive its economy — investors, entrepreneurs, and employers.
At the forefront of this call, Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), Dr. Muda Yusuf, emphasized that Nigeria urgently needs a comprehensive framework to safeguard investor rights and business interests. Despite being the backbone of job creation, innovation, and tax revenue generation, Yusuf noted, investors and employers remain exposed to significant risks with minimal legal protection.
He lamented the imbalance in Nigeria’s labour and investment environment, explaining that while employees enjoy well-defined legal safeguards, employers and investors face vulnerability from unrestrained union actions, unpredictable regulations, and bureaucratic challenges. According to him, this lopsided system discourages entrepreneurship and undermines national competitiveness.
“The manufacturing sector is especially at risk,” Yusuf explained, citing its large workforce and heavy operational costs. “We need policies that ensure fairness, predictability, and legal protection for those who create jobs. Industrial relations must be guided by law and mutual respect.”
He also warned that unchecked industrial actions and weak institutional enforcement have fostered a culture of intimidation and impunity within some labour circles, often leading to costly disruptions in production. Such instability, he said, drives away investors, triggers capital flight, and slows economic growth.
To restore confidence, Yusuf proposed the establishment of an Investor and Employer Protection Act—a law that would secure investor rights, strengthen the Industrial Arbitration Panel (IAP) for faster dispute resolution, and reinforce Nigeria’s economic stability through legal certainty.
Meanwhile, architect and sustainability advocate Ijeoma Azi highlighted another crucial dimension for Nigeria’s private sector — Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) integration. Speaking at the briefing, she described ESG as “a blueprint for long-term business resilience and profitability,” urging Nigerian companies to embed sustainability into their operations.
Azi stressed that ESG is not limited to large corporations. “A small business that uses eco-friendly packaging or improves staff welfare is already part of the ESG movement,” she said. “Global investors are increasingly directing funds toward sustainable enterprises. Those who act now will lead, while those who wait risk being left behind.”
She also underscored that governance is more than compliance — it’s about foresight, accountability, and legacy. By adopting regenerative design and sustainability practices, companies can reduce risk, strengthen brand reputation, and build trust with both customers and employees.
Azi encouraged corporate leaders to make ESG a boardroom priority by assigning clear responsibilities, setting measurable goals, and pursuing small, consistent improvements in energy use, waste reduction, and employee welfare. She cited regional models, such as Kenya’s green bond initiative and Kigali’s sustainable urban planning, as proof that African-led sustainability is both achievable and profitable.
“ESG is not a checkbox,” she concluded. “It’s a compass for building relevance, resilience, and respect in the global economy. Nigerian directors have the opportunity — and responsibility — to lead this transformation.”
Together, Yusuf’s advocacy for investor protection and Azi’s vision for ESG-driven business reform point toward a unified message: Nigeria’s economic future depends on creating an environment where enterprise can thrive — securely, sustainably, and competitively.