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Home » 12 Months after Relaunch, NATEP Advances Policy Reform

12 Months after Relaunch, NATEP Advances Policy Reform

…and Expanded International Partnerships

Joan Aimuengheuwa by Joan Aimuengheuwa
June 3, 2026
in Policies
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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NATEP - National Talent Export Programme

L-r: CEO, Itana, Luqman Edu; Founder & Group CEO, Rendeavour, Stephen Jennings; Honourable Minister of Industry, Trade & Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole; National Cordinator, National Talent Export Programme (NATEP), Teju Abisoye; Co-Founder, Itana, Iyin Aboyeji; and CEO, Alaro City & Chairman West Africa, Rendeavour, Yomi Ademola, at the MoU signing and official relaunch of NATEP held recently in Lagos.

The National Talent Export Programme marks one year since its strategic relaunch with significant institutional progress, policy milestones, and international partnerships that have repositioned Nigeria as a major talent hub in the global services export economy.

The most decisive of those milestones came in November 2025, when the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approved the establishment of the National Coordination Mechanism for Services Exports (NCMSE), creating a formal governance framework to strengthen inter-agency coordination, align national policy with global digital trade, and accelerate the growth of Nigeria’s services export sector.

Since its approval, the NCMSE has provided the institutional architecture for bringing together previously disconnected programmes, agencies, and stakeholders under a common services export agenda.

By fostering greater alignment among key institutions, including National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), Outsource To Nigeria Initiative (OTNI), and flagship talent initiatives such as 3MTT, the mechanism is helping to improve policy coherence, streamline implementation, and position talent development as a strategic driver of Nigeria’s services export competitiveness.

Building on this foundation, the Nigeria Talent Accelerator Network (NTAN) was officially launched in Lagos, in partnership with the World Economic Forum (WEF).

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It is co-chaired by the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment and the Ministry of Education, along with private-sector leaders from Africa Finance Corporation (AFC) and Flour Mills of Nigeria. This formally enters Nigeria into the WEF Global Accelerators Network, uniting public, private, and development sectors behind a unified workforce roadmap.

“We are witnessing a shift in the global economy, where greater value and the competitive advantage will be determined by a nation’s ability to cultivate talent, harness deep knowledge-based industries, and participate in high-value services markets built seamlessly across borders. As Africa becomes a more integrated marketplace, the continent has a unique opportunity to emerge as the leading contributor to the world’s talent economy. NATEP is laying the foundation for Nigeria to lead this transition by unlocking the full potential of our human capital, strengthening international partnerships, and positioning Nigerian talent at the centre of the next era of global services trade,” said Dr. Jumoke Oduwole, minister of Industry, Trade, and Investment.

NATEP also intensified efforts to deepen international partnerships that support Nigeria’s services export ambitions. Under the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Survey, a country-partner mandate was activated to mobilise senior business leaders and ensure Nigeria’s labour market realities are reflected in global workforce assessments and benchmarking exercises.

Concurrently, NATEP has commenced the development of an innovative financing framework to support talent development and export-led growth. The proposed four-layer capital stack combines catalytic public investment with outcomes-linked private capital, adapting global financing models to Nigeria’s economic realities and workforce priorities.

NATEP working with the Nigeria Outsourcing Association also partnered with the Global Business Services sector to streamline the Association in line with global best practice, further strengthening Nigeria’s credentials as a premier hub for international services outsourcing.

These partnerships have been matched by equally significant progress on the domestic policy front. In March 2026, a zero draft of Nigeria’s National Outsourcing Policy was forwarded to the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment for interministerial review, establishing the foundational architecture for a sector with transformative economic potential.

Across the programme’s Technical Working Groups (Demand, Supply, and Enabling Environment), implementation plans have been formalised, workstream leadership structures established, and talent development pathways validated, helping to consolidate a coherent national framework for talent supply, workforce readiness, and export competitiveness.

The Enabling Environment Technical Working Group has adopted WTO/GATS taxonomy standards and mapped five priority digital export sectors- Software/SaaS, Data and AI, Cybersecurity, Fintech, and BPO/ITES- equipping Nigeria to compete aggressively in the highest-growth segments of global digital trade.

“Our mandate at NATEP is to position Nigeria as a premier global talent hub by building an enabling ecosystem through policy, platforms, promotion, and partnerships,” said Teju Abisoye, national coordinator of NATEP. “The progress achieved over the past year brings us closer to our strategic objectives of enabling one million direct export-linked jobs, supporting millions more indirect jobs, attracting significant investment into the sector, and equipping Nigerians with globally recognised skills and certifications. Nigeria is not only preparing for the future of work; it is helping build the policy and institutional foundations required to compete and lead in it.”

As NATEP enters its next phase, the programme’s focus shifts decisively toward implementation at scale: operationalising the Private Sector-backed financing framework, advancing the National Outsourcing Policy through the policy approval process, and mobilising the full capabilities of NTAN to deliver workforce outcomes that strengthen Nigeria’s position in the global services export economy.

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