Close Menu
KumbhCoinorg
    What's Hot

    [LIVE] Crypto News Today, December 16 – Bitcoin Falls Below $86K Amid Extreme Fear and Significant Liquidations – Next Crypto To Explode?

    December 16, 2025

    1 in 20 Emails Carry Hidden Threats

    December 16, 2025

    EUR/USD Outlook Firm as ECB Holds, Eying EU PMI, US NFP

    December 16, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • [LIVE] Crypto News Today, December 16 – Bitcoin Falls Below $86K Amid Extreme Fear and Significant Liquidations – Next Crypto To Explode?
    • 1 in 20 Emails Carry Hidden Threats
    • EUR/USD Outlook Firm as ECB Holds, Eying EU PMI, US NFP
    • The Best Payroll Apps Of 2025
    • Missing Teen Found Dead in Ditch Weeks Later, Family Says
    • Ella McCay review – comfort food reheated, with a…
    • Privacy for the Powerful, Surveillance for the Rest: EU’s Proposed Tech Regulation Goes Too Far
    • 16 December, 2025 – Alpha Ideas
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    KumbhCoinorg
    Tuesday, December 16
    • Home
    • Crypto News
      • Bitcoin & Altcoins
      • Blockchain Trends
      • Forex News
    • Kumbh Mela
    • Entertainment
      • Celebrity Gossip
      • Movie & TV Reviews
      • Music Industry News
    • Market News
      • Global Economy Insights
      • Real Estate Trends
      • Stock Market Updates
    • Education
      • Career Development
      • Online Learning
      • Study Tips
    • Airdrop News
      • Ico News
    • Sports
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • hockey
    KumbhCoinorg
    Home»Market News»Global Economy Insights»Nigeria’s Shea Ban Backfires, Crushing Millions of Women Workers
    Global Economy Insights

    Nigeria’s Shea Ban Backfires, Crushing Millions of Women Workers

    kumbhorgBy kumbhorgOctober 7, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Nigeria’s Shea Ban Backfires, Crushing Millions of Women Workers
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    In August, the Associated Press reported that Nigeria had passed a law prohibiting the export of raw shea nuts — a key ingredient in many cosmetics.

    Shea nuts are big business in Nigeria, a country responsible for about 40 percent of the world’s shea crop production. The initiative was designed to position Nigeria as a leading producer of refined shea butter and other skincare products.

    “The ban will transform Nigeria from an exporter of raw shea nut to a global supplier of refined shea butter, oil, and other derivatives,” Nigeria’s vice president, Kashim Shettima, announced.

    The ban is not permanent, officials said, and is slated for review after six months. That is a good thing, because evidence shows the prohibition is already having consequences — and not the intended ones. The BBC reports that the ban on exports had “backfired.” 

    “The intention was to boost local production of the finished butter…and so increase the amount of the profit which stays in Nigeria,” BBC reporter Todah Opeyemi said. “But the sudden shift has led to a fall in demand for the shea nut as there is not enough local capacity to process all of the country’s harvest.”

    Filed a field report for BBC Pidgin on Nigeria’s 6-month ban on raw shea exports and how it’s hitting the women at the heart of the trade.

    The govt hopes the ban will boost local processing, with a target for Nigeria to capture a fifth of the global shea market by 2030. pic.twitter.com/PNXdxly8F7

    — Todah Opeyemi (@officialtodah) September 30, 2025

    This might sound like a small matter, but it’s not. Nigeria produces roughly 350,000 tonnes of shea nuts each year. The industry supports millions of workers — predominantly poor women. 

    The Centre for the Promotion of Imports from developing countries (CBI), a Dutch government agency that helps developing-country producers access European markets, notes that shea butter is often called “women’s gold” because it provides livelihoods for over 2.2 million Nigerian women who work as shea nut collectors and processors.

    Most of these workers are impoverished by Western standards. The BBC profiled Hajaratu Isah, a 40-year-old worker with six children who has spent her entire adult life preparing the fruit. Prior to the export ban, she could make as much as 5,000 naira ($3.30 USD) per day, which allowed her to purchase medicine and education services. Her earnings have reportedly fallen to less than half of that amount in the wake of the ban. 

    “Since the announcement, we have been suffering,” she told the BBC. “It does not affect only us but the entire chain of people working here, including the labourers.”

    Nigeria’s shea nut ban is a classic case of backfire economics, where a policy ends up harming the very people it’s meant to help. To be fair, there was a certain logic to the Nigerian government’s central plan. 

    The plan was to get a bigger piece of the $6.5 billion shea market. Nigeria might account for nearly half of the world’s shea nut production, but it accounts for just a sliver of the global shea butter marketplace — roughly one percent — because the vast majority of its nuts are shipped out in raw form and processed elsewhere.

    The solution seemed simple: instead of exporting raw shea nuts, refine them in Nigeria. It turns out, however, that refining shea nuts is not exactly easy. 

    I won’t claim to know anything about shea nuts — I couldn’t identify one if you showed it to me—but papers on the subject describe the refinement as an arduous task. Nuts have to be cleaned and sorted, cracked open, roasted just right, ground into a paste, and then squeezed to obtain butter — all without ruining the quality. In rural areas, much of this work is done by hand, but parts of the process require capital investment — decent equipment, lots of water, and clean storage (if not, the butter goes bad).

    Nigeria does have at least one major shea nut processing plant: Salid Agriculture Nigeria Limited. On its website, it says it produces 100 tonnes of shea butter a day — about one-tenth of what Nigeria would require — and boasts that it “empowers” 45,000 rural women workers. 

    Salid Agriculture is “an ally of the current government,” according to the BBC. And the company stands to benefit from the policy. Plummeting demand for shea nuts has already resulted in a collapse in prices, which means the firm can acquire raw materials at a fraction of their former cost —  and potentially dominate the newly protected domestic processing market.

    The ban will no doubt be a windfall for some. But for millions of Nigerians, it could be devastating. 

    “When I heard about the export ban, I could not sleep,” one 55-year-old woman, Fatima Ndako, told the BBC, adding that 14 people live in her house. “The money we make is what we use to feed our families.”

    We don’t know how Ndako and millions of other Nigerian women and their families will be affected by the ban on shea nuts, but students of economic history can be forgiven for fearing the worst. Attempts to plan and ban vast amounts of economic activity, even with the noblest intentions, can instead create human tragedies of catastrophic proportions. Similar efforts at economic self-sufficiency by force underlay the Holodomor famine in Ukraine under Stalin’s First Five-Year Plan, Mao’s disastrous Great Leap Forward, and Cambodia’s bloody attempt at agrarian utopia, among others.

    “The curious task of economics,” Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek observed, “is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”

    The idea that something as simple as an export ban on a nut can plunge millions into deeper poverty shows just how little control planners truly have over complex economic systems. Hopefully, the Nigerian government’s ham-fisted attempt to remake its shea industry by decree is quickly reversed and provides a lesson in humility — and not a humanitarian disaster.

    Backfires ban crushing millions Nigerias Shea Women workers
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleMohammed Siraj breaks silence on receiving ‘Jasprit Bumrah’ treatment from Shubman Gill on England tour
    Next Article What Really Matters is What You Like: “High Fidelity” at 25 | Features
    kumbhorg
    • Website
    • Tumblr

    Related Posts

    Global Economy Insights

    Privacy for the Powerful, Surveillance for the Rest: EU’s Proposed Tech Regulation Goes Too Far

    By kumbhorgDecember 16, 2025
    Global Economy Insights

    Trump’s ‘Broken Windows’ Economy | The Daily Economy

    By kumbhorgDecember 15, 2025
    Global Economy Insights

    The Cities with the Fastest Declining Rent Have This in Common

    By kumbhorgDecember 15, 2025
    Global Economy Insights

    The Fed’s Unlawful Floor System Pays Banks Billions to Sit on Reserves

    By kumbhorgDecember 14, 2025
    Global Economy Insights

    Klub Swiss Yang Tak Pernah Bisa Diremehkan » Dashofinsight

    By kumbhorgDecember 14, 2025
    Global Economy Insights

    We Learned Leadership Flipping Burgers: Don’t Close America’s On-Ramp

    By kumbhorgDecember 13, 2025
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Don't Miss

    [LIVE] Crypto News Today, December 16 – Bitcoin Falls Below $86K Amid Extreme Fear and Significant Liquidations – Next Crypto To Explode?

    By kumbhorgDecember 16, 2025

    Another day, another red Bitcoin candle. Why is crypto crashing? Liquidations have exceeded $658 million…

    1 in 20 Emails Carry Hidden Threats

    December 16, 2025

    EUR/USD Outlook Firm as ECB Holds, Eying EU PMI, US NFP

    December 16, 2025

    The Best Payroll Apps Of 2025

    December 16, 2025
    Top Posts

    Satwik-Chirag storm into China Masters final with straight-game win over Malaysia | Badminton News

    September 21, 2025105 Views

    SaucerSwap SAUCE Crypto Breaks Key Resistance Amid Nvidia-Hedera Deal

    July 15, 202545 Views

    Unlocking Your Potential with Mubite: The Future of Crypto Prop Trading

    September 17, 202533 Views

    Stablecoins 2025 Exchange Reserves: Insights into DeFi Trends

    September 8, 202532 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    About Us

    Welcome to KumbhCoin!
    At KumbhCoin, we strive to create a unique blend of cultural and technological news for a diverse audience. Our platform bridges the spiritual significance of the Kumbh Mela with the dynamic world of cryptocurrency and general news.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    [LIVE] Crypto News Today, December 16 – Bitcoin Falls Below $86K Amid Extreme Fear and Significant Liquidations – Next Crypto To Explode?

    December 16, 2025

    1 in 20 Emails Carry Hidden Threats

    December 16, 2025

    EUR/USD Outlook Firm as ECB Holds, Eying EU PMI, US NFP

    December 16, 2025
    Most Popular

    7 things to know before the bell

    January 22, 20250 Views

    Reeves optimistic despite surprise rise in UK borrowing

    January 22, 20250 Views

    Barnes & Noble stock soars 20% as it explores a sale Barnes & Noble stock soars 20% as it explores a sale

    January 22, 20250 Views
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    © 2025 Kumbhcoin. Designed by Webwizards7.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.