The Nigerian dream has changed.
There was a time when success was measured by owning a house, building a thriving business or rising to the top of one’s profession. Today, for many young Nigerians, success can be summarized in one word: Japa. This mass migration leaves the country asking a critical question about JAPA: escaping poverty or chasing prestige?
Mention that you are relocating to Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia or the United States and suddenly your social currency rises. Family members celebrate. Friends admire you. Social media congratulates you. In some circles, your value instantly appreciates before you even board the plane.
But beneath the excitement lies a controversial question: Are Nigerians relocating abroad because they are genuinely escaping poverty and seeking greener pastures, or has Japa become a status symbol in itself?
The popular narrative is that Nigerians are fleeing a harsh economic reality. And there is truth in that argument. Rising inflation, unemployment, insecurity, a weakening naira and limited opportunities have pushed many talented professionals to seek better lives elsewhere. Doctors, nurses, engineers, academics and tech professionals often cite poor working conditions and inadequate compensation as reasons for leaving.
For them, Japa is not a luxury; it is survival.

However, that is only part of the story.
Many Nigerians who relocate are not necessarily poor. Some come from middle-class or even affluent backgrounds. They own businesses, drive good cars and live relatively comfortable lives. Yet they still choose to leave. Why?
The answer may be uncomfortable.
For many, Japa has evolved beyond economics. It has become a social badge of honour. Living abroad carries a certain prestige that local success often struggles to match. The phrase “based in the UK” or “resident in Canada” opens doors, commands attention and elevates social standing in ways that a successful career in Nigeria sometimes does not.
In today’s Nigeria, a struggling migrant abroad can receive more admiration than a thriving entrepreneur at home.
Social media has amplified this phenomenon. Carefully curated photos of snowy streets, foreign supermarkets and international airports create the impression that life abroad is one endless success story. Rarely do people post about loneliness, depression, racial discrimination, multiple jobs or the crushing pressure of starting life from scratch.
The result is a dangerous illusion: the belief that crossing a border automatically upgrades one’s life.
Yet reality is often more complicated.
Many Nigerians abroad earn better incomes but face higher living costs. Some work jobs far below their qualifications. Others discover that citizenship and foreign residency do not automatically translate to happiness or fulfilment.
This does not mean Japa is a mistake. Far from it. For countless Nigerians, relocation has provided opportunities that may never have existed at home. It has created wealth, security and a better future for families.
But perhaps the real issue is that Nigeria has become a place where leaving is increasingly viewed as an achievement in itself.
A nation should not measure success by how many of its brightest minds can escape it.
So, is Japa driven by poverty or prestige?
The honest answer is both.
Some Nigerians are running from economic hardship. Others are chasing global opportunities. And many are pursuing something even more powerful: the status, security and validation that come with belonging to a more developed society.
The real tragedy is not that Nigerians want better lives. The real tragedy is that millions believe those better lives can only be found somewhere else.















