Vice President Kashim Shettima has restated Nigeria’s commitment to shaping Africa’s future through impact, inclusion, and investment.
In achieving this, he said, the nation was launching and strengthening initiatives such as the Business Coalition for Education and the Women and Youth Financial and Economic Inclusion Platform.
Speaking on Wednesday during the Africa Social Impact Summit High-Level Policy Engagement, held at the Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa, Abuja, the Vice President noted however that “government alone cannot solve Africa’s development challenges.”
Shettima, who was represented at the event by his Technical Adviser on Women, Youth Engagement, and Impact, Hajiya Hauwa Liman, said, “Beyond Nigeria’s commitment to shaping Africa’s future through impact, inclusion, and investment, this convening of the Africa Social Impact Summit (ASIS(, held in partnership with Sterling One Foundation and our local and global collaborators, must be more than an exercise in social relations.
“It must serve as a platform where intent is converted into execution, where dialogue matures into decision, and where partnerships are forged with outcomes firmly in view.”
The Vice President pointed out that Nigeria has never taken the potential of ASIS and its promise for granted, recalling that over the past four editions, the summit has evolved “into one of Africa’s most consequential platforms for development dialogue.
“We do not need a lecture on why this engagement matters. None of us doubts its relevance, because all of us here share the same aspiration: to build platforms of execution strong enough to carry the immense potential of this continent into lived reality,” he added.
He observed that while development had been “framed primarily as expenditure,” in the past decades, government’s responsibility at the moment was to reframe it as investment in human capital, productive systems, climate resilience, digital infrastructure, and inclusive markets.
Africa’s future, Shettima noted, would not be financed by aid alone but also by “patient capital, catalytic capital, blended finance, and private enterprise deployed at scale and guided by impact.”
In doing so, he said, “Nigeria is positioning itself accordingly. We are strengthening delivery systems across education, health, social protection, agriculture, climate action, digital public infrastructure, and financial inclusion.
“We are reforming institutions. We are aligning incentives. We are building national results architectures not to impress donors, but to serve citizens.”
Shettima pointed out that while Tinubu “has without doubt begun the work of turning Nigeria’s fortunes around, “no government, however committed, can finance or execute this agenda alone.”
He explained that it was for this reason the nation considered ASIS as “a convening ground for co-investment, co-design, and co-delivery.”
He described the summit as a “space where policymakers sit with CEOs, development partners, entrepreneurs, civil society leaders, and innovators to build solutions together.”
On empowering Nigerian youth, the Vice President said the Tinubu administration “has expanded opportunities for young people and women in keeping faith with its promise of an inclusive society.
“Our focus on strengthening human capital is unmistakable. But let me be candid. If we fail to stand together, we leave ourselves vulnerable to avoidable setbacks. This is a reminder to our development partners, to our social innovators, to civil society, and most importantly to the young people and women across Nigeria and across Africa. The stakes are too high for fragmentation. Progress demands coalition,” he further stated.





