Nigeriaโs muchโvaunted N668.34โฏbillion agricultural surplus in Q1โฏ2025 has been hailed as a triumph of agribusiness policy. Yet, as Nigeria slides into the lean season, millions are staring starvation in the face.
The contrast between booming exports and empty tables back home has ignited a fierce debate among economists, policymakers and farmers: does a paper surplus mean anything when wheat, maize and rice rarely reach the poorest Nigerian markets?
A Surplus That Fails to Feed
Data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) for Q1โฏ2025 show agricultural exports outstripped imports by N668.34โฏbillion, propelled by a 10.63โฏperโฏcent growth in exports to N1.70โฏtrillion and a modest 5.02โฏperโฏcent drop in imports to N1.04โฏtrillion quarterโonโquarter.
But yearโonโyear, imports actually surged 12.52โฏperโฏcent from N920.54โฏbillion in Q1โฏ2024โundermining claims of true selfโsufficiency.
In real terms, Nigeria spent almost as much on food imports as it earned from exports, signalling deep structural flaws.
Nor is this surplus evenly distributed. The top exportsโstandard and superior quality cocoa beans (N719.91โฏbn and N508.27โฏbn respectively), cashew nuts (N157.63โฏbn), sesame seeds (N128.18โฏbn) and cocoa butter (N80.05โฏbn)โare largely raw commodities destined for Europe and Asia..
Meanwhile, staple grains and tubers that sustain Nigerian households rely on costly imports of durum wheat and soybeans, as local processing capacity remains chronically underfunded.
Hungerโs Silent Advance
Even as export coffers swell, food prices have rebounded precipitously. Mayโฏ2025 food inflation stood at 21.14โฏperโฏcentโdown only marginally from April, but still more than double the Central Bankโs comfort zone.
For the average Nigerian family, a 20โฏperโฏcent price hike is not a statistic but a painful reality, eroding meagre incomes and forcing choices between meals and medicine.
The United Nations World Food Programme projects some 33โฏmillion Nigerians will face acute food insecurity by Augustโฏ2025โpeak of the lean seasonโdriven by conflict, climate shocks and economic turmoil.
Insecurity in key agricultural states such as Plateau, Benue and Niger has displaced farmers and destroyed harvests, narrowing market supplies and propelling prices even higher.
Agribusiness vs. Food Security
Stakeholders applaud the surge in export earnings but warn it masks a perilous omission: value addition. TundeโฏBanjoko, Chairman of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industryโs Agricultural & Allied Group, laments that โexporting raw materials is easy; building processing plants to turn cornflour into pasta or soy into oil is harderโbut thatโs where food security truly lies.โ
Banjoko argues that Nigeriaโs reliance on dutyโfree import windows to stabilise markets is a stopโgap, not a strategy.
The Federal Governmentโs 150โday waiver slashed duties on food imports, providing temporary relief but discouraging investment in local mills and factories. And when the waiver ends, markets will be again at the mercy of global price swings and foreign exchange shortages.

The False Comfort of Forex Gains
Agribusinesses driving the surplus are, in part, chasing foreign exchange rather than domestic food needs.
โThe โrush for forexโ saw prices of cashew spike this year even as cocoa fell, because buyers in Asia sought our raw produce,โ Banjoko observes.
Yet that focus on FX earnings often sidelines staples like rice and maize, perpetuating dependency on imports.
KabirโฏIbrahim, President of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), underscores a further distortion: most agricultural activity remains informal and underโrecorded.
โNBS data overlooks crossโborder trade through porous borders and unrestrained informal markets,โ he notes, suggesting the N668โฏbn figure underestimates true export performanceโand true import volumes.
Yet even generous estimates of unrecorded trade cannot erase the fact that subsistence farmersโthe backbone of Nigeriaโs food systemโreceive scant support. Irrigation remains limited to riverside plots; credit is scarce; and extension services fail to reach remote communities. Without tackling these grassroots deficiencies, topโline surpluses will continue to ring hollow.
Food Processing: Nigeriaโs Missing Link
Historically, Nigeriaโs agricultural policy has favoured export cropsโcocoa, palm oil, groundnutsโover staples. Independence era efforts to establish mills foundered under corruption and neglect.
Today, only a fraction of cereals produced domestically is milled locally; the rest is processed overseas.
Reindustrialising food processing would deliver multiple dividends: job creation, stabilised local food prices, and the retention of value within Nigeriaโs economy.
Nigeria currently processes less than 10โฏperโฏcent of its maize internally, relying on external facilities in South Africa and Europe. A concerted plan to build domestic mills, supported by concessional loans and tax incentives, could flip that ratio within five years.
Policy Prescriptions and Political Will
Critics say successive governments have lacked the political will to prioritise food processing. Subsidies favour fertiliser and farm inputs, but rarely feed into factory floors.
Even when processed goods are produced locally, duties on imported substitutes remain low, starving nascent industries of market share.
To break the cycle, experts propose a threeโpronged approach:
- Targeted Incentives: Zeroโduty on imported processing machinery, paired with higher tariffs on foreignโmade processed foods.
- PublicโPrivate Partnerships: Government equity stakes in agroโparks and industrial clusters to deโrisk private investment.
- Rural Credit and Extension: Expanded microfinance facilities and revamped extension services to boost yields and input quality.
A Race Against Time
With floods devastating farmlands in Niger State and banditry upending harvests in Plateau, time is running out.
โNo nation is ever selfโsufficient,โ Banjoko concedes, โbut we should not be importing goods we can produce at homeโ.
Were Nigeria to match exports of raw commodities with exports of valueโadded foods, the real surplus would translate into food on Nigerian tables.
However, without a radical shift from raw exports to processed goods, plus targeted support for subsistence farmers, the coming months promise only deeper hunger.
The glory of a N668โฏbn surplus will ring hollow in dining rooms across Nigeriaโunless policy catches up with potently simple economics: feed your people first.




