Ali Baba emphasised that disappointment with Nigeria’s government and infrastructure drives people to relocate.
Popular comedian Ali Baba has revealed why many Nigerians are relocating abroad.
According to him, the frustration with the country’s infrastructure, security concerns and financial burdens as key reasons.
He stated this while speaking on ‘Outside The Box’ podcast.
Alibaba shares a personal anecdote about a friend, an Assistant General Manager at a bank, who spent N130,000 monthly on fuel and N1 million on diesel for electricity.
This, he said, combined with expensive education, security and housing costs, totalled N22-N23 million per quarter.
According to him, his friend wondered if this money could be better spent on a mortgage overseas.
Ali Baba explained, “He had three cars, the one the office gave him, his personal car which the Madam uses and one for the house. The office takes care of the official car including fuel and driver, so he has to take care of two cars. The driver will take two children to one school, then the madam will take the other child to the other school. Every month he was spending N130,000 on fuel, and then at home, he was doing about a million naira on diesel to provide electricity.
“The wife had a confectionery business at the back. Feeding for the family, his drivers, and the siblings living with them. Security was also very important. Education was expensive, two were below twelve, and the other one was about 13 or 14. He has to pay the house rent every year. Mortgage is not something we’re used to here, I think it’s just beginning to grow on us. When he totalled all of this, it was running into N22-N23 million every term, about every quarter.”
Ali Baba highlighted several differences between living in Nigeria and abroad, stating that abroad, children attend public schools with reliable transportation, eliminating the need for private school fees.
“Then he said if I convert this, can I be doing it as a mortgage to a house I have overseas? Alibaba continued, emphasising the differences between living in Nigeria and abroad.
“If he does that, would he still be paying school fees for the children? He may not be paying school fees, they’ll go to public schools. There, school buses will pick up and drop them or the distance to school is walkable.
“What is the security for children? Will anybody kidnap two of his children and come and say bring money? No. When the children graduate what are the chances that they would find work there and what are the chances that they would find work here?
“If he is there, would he be employing drivers and paying for a gateman, security, wash man and others? No. Most times when people do all of those calculations, they come to a point where they say let’s give it a shot.”
He added that kidnappings and police harassment are less common overseas and children can find work after graduating, and parents don’t need to employ drivers or security personnel.
“It is true that when you are in Nigeria, the chances and opportunities that come to you to make a lot of money increase. Some of them don’t pay taxes. You can just be named Commissioner for Finance and your economic trajectory has changed. Would that happen overseas? No!
“But would somebody kidnap your children overseas and demand something and they can’t find the people? No. Would you get a call one day and they say your son was carrying dreadlocks and they’ve picked him up and said you should come and bail him?
“Would the police stop you at night and the chances of you having an altercation with them arise overseas if you’re not living right? Yes, but if you’re living right you don’t have that kind of stress”, he said.
Ali Baba emphasised that disappointment with Nigeria’s government and infrastructure drives people to relocate.
He criticises the lack of a reliable national registry, citing issues with database management and population census.