Following the advice that Nigerians should start frying akara and moi-moi, I decided to start my own akara business today. At least I'm doing my part.
The real question is: should citizens be forced into survival businesses because of economic hardship, or should leadership create an environment where people have genuine opportunities to thrive?
For now, my akara is hot and ready. 🇳🇬😂
@DOlusegun It's an affront to democracy in Nigeria. APC is a thug political party. Nigerians will resist their attempt to impose autocratic tendencies.
It is disappointing that after this administration has borrowed billions of dollars from the World Bank, Nigerian women are being advised to survive by selling akara and moi-moi instead of hearing about policies that create jobs, improve access to affordable credit, reduce inflation, and support small businesses.
Nigerian women are not afraid of hard work. They have always been traders, entrepreneurs, farmers, professionals, and innovators. What they need is an economy that rewards their effort—not one where rising food prices, unstable electricity, and the high cost of doing business make survival a daily struggle.
Leadership should focus on creating opportunities that help citizens build sustainable livelihoods, not present subsistence trading as the answer to an economy under severe pressure. After borrowing so heavily, Nigerians have every right to ask: where are the investments, where are the jobs, and where are the tangible improvements in their standard of living?
It is disappointing that after this administration has borrowed billions of dollars from the World Bank, Nigerian women are being advised to survive by selling akara and moi-moi instead of hearing about policies that create jobs, improve access to affordable credit, reduce inflation, and support small businesses.
Nigerian women are not afraid of hard work. They have always been traders, entrepreneurs, farmers, professionals, and innovators. What they need is an economy that rewards their effort—not one where rising food prices, unstable electricity, and the high cost of doing business make survival a daily struggle.
Leadership should focus on creating opportunities that help citizens build sustainable livelihoods, not present subsistence trading as the answer to an economy under severe pressure. After borrowing so heavily, Nigerians have every right to ask: where are the investments, where are the jobs, and where are the tangible improvements in their standard of living?
It is disappointing that after this administration has borrowed billions of dollars from the World Bank, Nigerian women are being advised to survive by selling akara and moi-moi instead of hearing about policies that create jobs, improve access to affordable credit, reduce inflation, and support small businesses.
Nigerian women are not afraid of hard work. They have always been traders, entrepreneurs, farmers, professionals, and innovators. What they need is an economy that rewards their effort not one where rising food prices, unstable electricity, and the high cost of doing business make survival a daily struggle.
Leadership should focus on creating opportunities that help citizens build sustainable livelihoods, not present subsistence trading as the answer to an economy under severe pressure. After borrowing so heavily, Nigerians have every right to ask: where are the investments, where are the jobs, and where are the tangible improvements in their standard of living?
It is disappointing that after this administration has borrowed billions of dollars from the World Bank, Nigerian women are being advised to survive by selling akara and moi-moi instead of hearing about policies that create jobs, improve access to affordable credit, reduce inflation, and support small businesses.
Nigerian women are not afraid of hard work. They have always been traders, entrepreneurs, farmers, professionals, and innovators. What they need is an economy that rewards their effort not one where rising food prices, unstable electricity, and the high cost of doing business make survival a daily struggle.
Leadership should focus on creating opportunities that help citizens build sustainable livelihoods, not present subsistence trading as the answer to an economy under severe pressure. After borrowing so heavily, Nigerians have every right to ask: where are the investments, where are the jobs, and where are the tangible improvements in their standard of living?
@aonanuga1956 It is disappointing that after this administration has borrowed billions of dollars from the World Bank, Nigerian women are being advised to survive by selling akara and moi-moi instead of hearing about policies that create jobs, improve access to affordable credit, reduce inflation, and support small businesses.
Nigerian women are not afraid of hard work. They have always been traders, entrepreneurs, farmers, professionals, and innovators. What they need is an economy that rewards their effort not one where rising food prices, unstable electricity, and the high cost of doing business make survival a daily struggle.
Leadership should focus on creating opportunities that help citizens build sustainable livelihoods, not present subsistence trading as the answer to an economy under severe pressure. After borrowing so heavily, Nigerians have every right to ask: where are the investments, where are the jobs, and where are the tangible improvements in their standard of living?
if you like bleach,we go still know you,......
😂baba we recognize you sir😂😂
We No go vote for you , you are a one term PRESIDENT .
Your government is worst thank Buhari government.