By ABT NEWS Staff Writers — Connecting global stories to local realities at www.abtnews.net
If you observe the African diaspora closely, a fascinating, frustrating, and incredibly consistent pattern emerges.
Every single year, billions of dollars cross the Atlantic and the English Channel. Hard-working Africans living abroad send their hard-earned money back home. They buy vast tracts of land. They erect breathtaking multi-million naira mansions in Harare. They finance luxury estates in Abuja and build massive warehouses in Nairobi.
Yet, despite this massive influx of capital, a glaring vacuum remains: they rarely build operating businesses.
When you sit down with these diasporans, the professionals running pharmacies in London, managing care homes in Birmingham, or driving logistics trucks across North America, and ask them why their investments stop at brick and mortar, the response is almost always a collective, weary sigh:
“If my eyes are not on it, it will grow wings and fly away.”
So, the money keeps flowing, but only into assets that sleep. The land slowly appreciates, but the local economy misses out on factories, supermarkets, tech hubs, and the jobs they would create. The business never actually starts.
The Tail of Two Cities: London vs. Lagos
Now, here is the mind-bending twist that exposes the true nature of this issue.
A Nigerian entrepreneur living comfortably in Lagos can spot an opportunity in London. They can launch a UK-registered enterprise, put another Nigerian in charge of the daily operations, and sleep like a baby at night.
But take that exact same scenario and reverse the map. A Nigerian living in London cannot start a business in Lagos, hand the keys to a local manager, and get a single night of uninterrupted sleep.
Why? They are the same people. They share the same blood, the same heritage, and the same cultural roots. Yet, their behaviors are worlds apart.
This is Not a Trust Issue—It’s a Systems Crisis
Many cultural critics quicky blame a “lack of integrity” or “family entitlement” for this phenomenon. But at ABT NEWS, we look deeper. This is not primarily a character flaw or a trust problem.
It is a systems problem.
The very same Nigerian diaspora investor who refuses to trust his own biological brother to manage a small supermarket in Lagos will gladly hire a complete stranger from Nigeria to run a high-stakes logistics company in Manchester.
The explanation is simple:
- In Manchester, the system enforces the agreement. If an employee steals or mismanages funds, there are real-time consequences. Auditing software flags irregularities, digital payments leave clear footprints, and the legal framework swiftly holds bad actors accountable.
- In Lagos, the agreement often enforces nothing. Breaching a business contract or embezzling funds can lead to years of agonizing, expensive, and ultimately unresolved litigation in a backlogged court system.
Trust is not an emotional luxury; it is an economic calculation. A structured environment makes trust incredibly cheap to maintain. A broken environment makes trust prohibitively expensive.
Building for Accountability
The harsh reality of the “Diaspora Paradox” offers a masterclass for business owners worldwide. Success does not come from waiting for an ideal, flawless workforce. Smart business leaders focus far less on “finding honest people” and far more on building unshakeable systems.
If you are a business owner looking to scale, remember these two cardinal rules:
- Don’t recruit for character alone; build for accountability. Character gets people through the door, but a transparent system keeps them honest.
- Don’t just pray for honest employees; create structures where honesty is the easiest, most rewarding option.
Your brother working in Manchester is not magically more righteous or saintly than your brother living in Mushin. He is simply operating in an ecosystem where honesty yields a better return on investment, and dishonesty carries immediate ruin.
If you want to transform the behavior of the people around you, you must first change the environment in which they operate.
Are you looking to capture the attention of a dynamic, global audience? ABT NEWS connects businesses with thousands of engaged readers across the diaspora and at home every day. To feature your products, real estate developments, or corporate services on our platform, reach out to our advertising team at advertise@abtnews.net or call us directly at +447918790290.














