In early 2024, cities across Nigeria were gripped by protests. Marching under banners demanding an end to hunger and bad governance, thousands of citizens took to the streets to demonstrate against a bruising cost-of-living crisis.
Food inflation hovered near a staggering 40 percent, driven by a decade of rural insecurity and recent economic shock therapy under President Bola Tinubu’s administration, which simultaneously increased fuel prices and slashed the naira’s purchasing power. For millions of Nigerians, skipping meals became a daily necessity—giving rise to terms like “010” or “001” to describe whether a family was eating lunch, dinner, or just one meal a day.
Yet, against this grim backdrop, the country’s largest food conglomerates are not just surviving; they are experiencing meteoric growth.
According to a recent report by the Financial Times, BUA Foods, one of Nigeria’s foremost agricultural and processing giants, recently secured the 35th spot on the FT-Statista ranking of Africa’s fastest-growing companies. With a market capitalization now hovering around $13 billion, the company’s financial success seems to defy gravity in a country where the Global Hunger Index categorizes 20 percent of the population as undernourished.
A Market Driven by Necessity
Ayodele Musibau Abioye, managing director of BUA Foods, attributes the company’s resilience to a fundamental human reality. “Everybody must eat,” he noted in an interview with the Financial Times.
When fuel and import costs soar, conglomerates like BUA—along with competitors like Dangote and Flour Mills of Nigeria—are forced to pass those costs onto the consumer. But unlike luxury goods or discretionary spending, food demand remains uniquely inelastic. Consumers find ways to absorb the costs because filling a basic physiological need isn’t optional.
The Shift to Imported Staples
Ironically, the very insecurity that plagues the Nigerian countryside has inadvertently bolstered the dominance of these massive conglomerates.
For years, militant attacks and clashes with herders have forced smallholder farmers to abandon their fields, severely reducing local harvests. Without access to financing, modern irrigation, or secure transport routes, local “bush farmers” are struggling to compete. This agricultural vacuum has handed a near-monopoly to deep-pocketed conglomerates that import the vast bulk of their food.
Furthermore, consumer habits have shifted. Both necessity and changing tastes have driven Nigerians away from traditional crops like yam, cassava, and sorghum, and toward staples like bread and pasta made from imported wheat. Because wheat does not thrive in Nigeria’s hot, humid climate, the nation relies heavily on imports—a game that only massive companies with international trading networks and capital can play efficiently.
The Numbers Speak
The scale of this growth is difficult to overstate. BUA Foods, which consolidated and listed on the Nigerian stock exchange in 2022, operates across multiple product categories including sugar, flour, pasta, rice, and edible oils. The diversification acts as a natural hedge; if demand sags in one sector, another picks up the slack.
Their financial trajectory over the last two years paints a picture of massive expansion despite the broader economic crisis:
| Financial Year | Total Revenue | Pre-Tax Profit |
| 2022 | N418 billion | N107 billion ($252m) |
| 2024 | N1.53 trillion | N284 billion |
The staggering tripling of revenue and massive profit margins highlight a stark reality in modern Nigeria. In times of severe food shortages, the government frequently lifts import restrictions, heavily favoring massive importers with strong supply chains.
While everyday Nigerians continue to navigate the crushing realities of inflation, the corporate food sector remains insulated. As BUA Foods begins a new push into consumer-facing branding to protect its double-digit margins, it is clear that in the business of basic survival, the biggest players hold all the cards.
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