elizabeth agboola

Tourism is often described as underfunded. That description is incomplete. Tourism is not underfunded because capital is unavailable. It is underfunded because capital does not move toward ambiguity.

Banks, development finance institutions, pension funds, and private investors do not invest in enthusiasm. They invest in systems predictable ones.

Tourism’s challenge is not attracting interest. It is demonstrating structure.

Capital Does Not Finance Sectors ; It Finances Frameworks

Finance rarely asks whether tourism is attractive. It asks whether tourism is organised.

Capital looks for:

  • predictable demand
  • transparent cash flows
  • governance clarity
  • risk mitigation mechanisms
  • data it can model
  • policy consistency

Where these exist, capital follows regardless of sector. Where they do not, even high-demand sectors struggle.

Why Tourism Often Appears “High Risk”

Tourism is frequently labelled risky not because demand is weak, but because structure is uneven.

Common red flags for financiers include:

  • fragmented operators with no aggregation
  • seasonal volatility without mitigation strategies
  • inconsistent transport and visa systems
  • limited sector-wide data
  • unclear policy ownership

These are not tourism problems alone. They are coordination problems.

What Changes When Tourism Is Structured Properly

When tourism is planned as an ecosystem aligned with agriculture, transport, extractives, health, and climate several things change from a finance perspective.

Cash flows become:

  • more predictable
  • diversified across sub-sectors
  • less exposed to single shocks

Risk becomes:

  • spread across value chains
  • easier to insure
  • easier to price

Tourism moves from being “interesting” to being bankable.

The Role of Financial Institutions in the Tourism Ecosystem

Finance does not sit outside tourism. It shapes what tourism becomes.

When banks and DFIs engage early:

  • SMEs receive tailored credit products
  • infrastructure financing aligns with demand
  • diaspora capital is channelled productively
  • public–private partnerships become viable

Tourism does not ask finance to be generous. It asks finance to be intentional.

Why Nigeria’s Tourism Opportunity Is Misunderstood

Nigeria’s tourism demand exists across:

  • business travel
  • diaspora movement
  • faith-based travel
  • culture and events
  • regional mobility

What has been missing is the institutional wrapper that allows finance to engage confidently. Capital is not waiting for Nigeria to prove demand. It is waiting for Nigeria to demonstrate coordination.

 

What Practical Collaboration Looks Like

Effective tourism finance collaboration is not about slogans or summits.

It requires:

  • tourism-specific credit frameworks
  • export-style thinking for services
  • data systems that allow risk assessment
  • policy stability across ministries
  • aggregation mechanisms for SMEs

This is how capital becomes a partner, not a spectator.

Final Thoughts 

Capital does not avoid tourism. It avoids uncertainty.

When tourism is structured, aligned across sectors, governed coherently, and supported by credible data finance responds naturally.

Tourism becomes investable not because it is promoted, but because it is prepared.

Structure is the signal. Capital is the response.

 

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