Manny Ita
The official establishment of the Nigeria Fashion Federation marks a significant shift in Nigeria’s economic strategy, signalling a move away from an oil-dependent model toward what policymakers describe as a diversified “Creative Economy.” As of January 13, 2026, the initiative has progressed from policy formulation to active implementation under the supervision of the Federal Ministry of Arts, Culture, and Creative Economy.
The federation was formally established by the Minister of Arts, Culture, and Creative Economy, Hannatu Musawa, and is positioned as Nigeria’s domestic counterpart to the Confederation of African Fashion. Its mandate is to function as a national coordinating body, serving as a bridge between government institutions and private-sector stakeholders within the fashion industry. Officials say the federation is designed to unify a previously fragmented sector and align it with continental and global frameworks.
As part of its core responsibilities, the federation is expected to support the development of specialised fashion clusters and hubs across the country to enable local processing of raw materials such as cotton, leather, and textiles. The initiative also introduces, for the first time, a dedicated federal mechanism for the protection of intellectual property within the fashion sector, with a focus on safeguarding traditional motifs such as Adire and Aso-Oke from external exploitation and ensuring benefit-sharing with local artisans.
Youth participation is a central component of the federation’s framework. The structure is intended to integrate youth collectives into the global fashion value chain through access to funding, mentorship, and institutional support, targeting Gen Z and Millennial designers across the country.
The Federal Government has projected that fashion and related creative industries will play a major role in achieving Nigeria’s targeted GDP growth of between 4.2 and 4.4 per cent in 2026. Officials have described the sector as a new “Creative Oil Well,” with projections indicating a potential contribution of $15.5 billion to the economy by the end of 2026 through exports and fashion-driven tourism.
Data cited by the government shows that Nigeria currently imports an estimated $23 billion worth of footwear and apparel annually. Through the promotion of “Made in Nigeria” products, tax incentives, and expanded local manufacturing, the federation aims to reduce this import bill by 30 per cent before the end of 2026. In terms of employment, the initiative is expected to support the creation of more than two million jobs across the fashion value chain, with particular emphasis on women, artisans, and rural communities.
On the diplomatic and trade front, Nigeria has become the first country to sign the African Fashion Industry Growth Charter, a move aligned with a broader continental vision known as “Afroliganza,” pioneered by the Lai Labode Heritage Foundation. The charter sets out an ambition to expand Africa’s share of the global fashion market from its current 1.2 per cent and grow the continental fashion economy from an estimated $30 billion to $500 billion over the next decade.
As part of this international push, Nigeria is scheduled to host the inaugural African Global Fashion Games in 2027, timed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of FESTAC ’77. In the lead-up to the event, proof-of-concept platforms such as Egbaliganza are expected to take place throughout 2026. Fashion has also been adopted as an official tool of Nigerian diplomacy, with embassies and foreign missions tasked with promoting Nigerian designers as cultural ambassadors to attract foreign direct investment.
The federation represents a departure from the country’s previous economic model, which prioritised crude oil exports, toward a system centred on what officials describe as “Creative Capital,” encompassing fashion and the arts. Unlike the largely private-led and fragmented structure that existed before 2025, the new framework introduces a federally coordinated, CAFA-aligned model focused on local processing of raw materials and deeper participation in global markets.
In the first quarter of 2026, the federation is expected to begin establishing state chapters nationwide, a move intended to ensure that designers in key production hubs such as Aba, Kano, and Abeokuta gain direct access to federal grants and support programmes.

