AN INVESTMENT IN MINDS: Human Capital as the Heart of Governance in Akwa Ibom State
2026 Critical Review
By Ephraim Okon, PhD, Esq, anipr
From Vision to Verification
The 2026 fiscal landscape of Akwa Ibom State is defined by an ambitious pivot toward human capital as the primary driver of the ARISE Agenda. This vision is grounded in a hard economic truth: the World Bank attributes 64% of Nigeria’s wealth gap to deficits in health, education, and skills. By matching this premise with dedicated budget lines and statewide programming, Governor Umo Eno’s administration has achieved a significant policy milestone.
Indeed, as Vice President Kashim Shettima noted, Akwa Ibom has distinguished itself as the first state to successfully localise the National Human Capital Development framework across every Local Government Area (LGA). This systemic alignment across all 31 LGAs signals a departure from purely sentimental governance toward a model of evidence-based development. However, as the focus shifts from vision to verification, the critical task for 2026 is ensuring these inputs translate into the next—and harder—milestone: measurable improvements in employment, productivity, and wellbeing by 2027. The question now facing citizens and analysts alike is whether these strategic flag-offs are becoming finished projects that fundamentally alter the state’s socio-economic trajectory.
In the education sector, the administration’s commitment is evident in the ₦31.6 billion allocation and the establishment of the ARISE Education Trust Fund, designed to insulate academic financing from political cycles. This foresight has contributed to a primary out-of-school rate of 3.5%, a figure that stands in stark contrast to the national crisis. Yet, to fully realise the potential of this vision, the state must navigate a significant proportional gap. While the absolute numbers are historic, the 2.0% allocation of the total ₦1.584 trillion budget trails the UNESCO recommendation of 15–20% and falls behind the 2024 national average of 7.9%. Beyond funding, the 2024 WAEC and NECO pass rate of 71.2% suggests that the “quality lottery” remains a challenge. To bridge this, the administration’s current efforts would be bolstered by legislating a 5% IGR contribution to the Trust Fund and publishing LGA-level dashboards. Such transparency would transform the bursary scheme for 20,000 students into a data-driven engine for equity, especially when paired with quality-focused partnerships like Teach for Nigeria to address teacher-pupil ratios in underserved areas.
The administration’s vision for youth productivity is equally robust, headlined by the Dakkada Skills Acquisition Centre (DASAC) and the ₦9.3 billion investment in Youth-Friendly Centres across 31 LGAs. IBOM-LED’s support for over 4,000 entrepreneurs demonstrates a clear intent to move from dependency to self-reliance. To elevate this structure from a training model to an economic absorption engine, the state must now confront the scale of the 29.8% youth unemployment rate. Currently, the vocational infrastructure reaches approximately 1.2% of the 1.2 million unemployed youth annually. To prevent these skills from stalling, the governance framework should integrate “enabling infrastructure”—such as solar backups for Youth Centres—directly into the training budget. By releasing grants in tranches tied to business milestones and routing financing through Ibom Fadama Microfinance Bank, the state can ensure that the initial investment in a young person’s mind results in a sustainable business that outlives the first year of operation.
This focus on sustainability extends to the state’s empowerment schemes, where ₦10 billion has been deployed to reach nearly 8,000 citizens. This represents a high-visibility commitment to grassroots welfare. To transition this from a moment of relief to a lifetime of capital, the analytical view suggests shifting from one-off cash grants to a “credit-discipline” model. Since a ₦50,000 grant covers just over half the average micro-startup cost identified by SMEDAN, the administration could enhance its own vision by reserving 30% of state contracts under ₦10 million for verified IBOM-LED businesses. This would create a guaranteed market for local graduates, ensuring that state spending directly fuels the growth of the very entrepreneurs the government has trained.
In the health sector, the allocation of ₦136.1 billion signals an alignment with the national Maternal Mortality Reduction Innovations Initiative. Akwa Ibom’s under-five mortality rate already outperforms the national average, yet the administration’s goal of reaching acceptable global standards requires a shift from infrastructure to implementation. While money is moving, systems lag; BudgIT’s 2025 ranking placed the state 14th in cash-backing for primary healthcare centres (PHCs). The vision of a healthy workforce is most effectively realised by ensuring that every PHC is not just built, but staffed with a doctor and powered by renewable energy. Adopting clear indicators for 2027—specifically targeting skilled birth attendance rates by LGA—would provide the verification needed to prove that the health budget is saving lives at the last mile.
This leads to the broader structural question of budget balance. With capital expenditure making up 75% of the 2026 budget, there is a risk that the “concrete” of infrastructure may crowd out the “competence” of human systems. Governor Eno has shown a stable, planning-oriented leadership style that favours long-term growth. To institutionalise this, the administration can lead the way by ring-fencing 15% of the infrastructure vote for projects that directly enable human capital, such as rural roads to training hubs and broadband for Youth Centres. Linking public works contracts to the employment of DASAC graduates would further harmonise the state’s physical and intellectual investments.
From Personality to Institution
Ultimately, the goal is to ensure that the ARISE Agenda becomes an institutional legacy that outlives any single administration. The path to this credibility lies in transitioning from political will to legislative permanence. Passing the ARISE Human Capital Development Bill and creating an independent oversight board would provide the private sector and civil society with a meaningful seat at the table. Furthermore, utilizing digital tools like the EYEMARK app for real-time project tracking would move the citizenry from being mere spectators to becoming active auditors of their own development.
The Roadmap to Impact
Closing the gap between intent and impact requires a shift toward granular, data-driven execution. This means publishing LGA-level data on scholarships, legislating mandatory IGR contributions to the Education Trust Fund, and transitioning empowerment grants into business milestones. Operationally, it requires powering every Youth Centre with solar energy, routing empowerment funds through zero-per-cent credit models, and reserving public contracts for trained graduates. In the health sector, success must be measured by the staffing and lighting of primary healthcare centres and the ring-fencing of infrastructure spending for human capital enablers. While infrastructure remains vital—as citizens need roads to reach clinics and training hubs—the concrete” must always serve the “competence.
The Real Measure of Success
The true measure of Akwa Ibom’s 2026 framework is not found in the headlines of a ₦1.584 trillion budget, but in the specific life of the individual citizen. The ultimate test of this administration’s vision is a practical one: can a student in a remote LGA like Udung Uko learn digital skills at a powered centre, access ₦100,000 in startup credit, and eventually deliver her child safely with a skilled attendant nearby? Can a DASAC graduate in Ikot Ekpene secure a job on a state road project, receive payment on time, and build a pensionable future? When the data proves these outcomes, the administration’s vision will have reached its zenith. That is how minds become markets, how budgets become better lives, and how governance in Akwa Ibom earns its place as a definitive model for the continent.
About the Author:
Abom Ephraim Okon,PhD, Esq.,anipr is Special Assistant to the Governor of Akwa Ibom State on Grassroots Mobilisation and a development policy analyst writing in his personal capacity. Data sources: Akwa Ibom State 2026 Approved Budget, NBS Q4 2024 Labour Force Survey, BudgIT State of States 2025, World Bank Nigeria Human Capital Reports, SMEDAN 2025. Feedback: [email protected]
