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Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? - Politics (5) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsWho Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? (26803 Views)

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Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by trytillmake(m): 8:30am On Oct 25, 2025
DoTheNeedful:
I have been living in the US for almost a decade, and I can tell you that value of $1,000 in the US is less than 90k in Nigeria.

It is surprising that many of you, including graduates, don't understand that you can't just arbitrarily convert dollars or pounds to naira in this context.

You cannot start a family anywhere in the US with $1, 000. You would need at least a job that pays you $6,000 per month to think of marriage. An ideal monthly salary would be around $10,000.

With 1.5 million in Nigeria, you can afford to marry a jobless partner, support two children, and own a decent car.

You could eat out in Nigeria with 2k, but eating out in the US would cost you around 25 dollars (35k). I get a haircut every month for $50 (75k) in the US. In Nigeria, I could get the same haircut for around 1k.

If you have a baby in the US, you would need to spend around $2,000 (3 million) per month on day care. In Nigeria, you would pay maybe 50k.
Baba thanks for this, that's means na to dey charge better money for remote jobs be dat.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by dreamxhaser: 8:31am On Oct 25, 2025
AirBere:
grin grin
How were you able to quantity this statistics? What tools did you use/sample size. Now I understand why I was told that all statistics are made up until proven otherwise.

USA is better than Scotland, and I've been staying in Scotland since 2001. I've never felt the need to come back and live in Nigeria but I do visit once a year or once in two years and I don't stay more than 2weeks or at maximum a month. I enjoy visiting Nigeria but not to come back and stay permanently.

I have colleagues in the UK, Canada, Germany, Malta, Luxembourg, Switzerland in the same boat. We all love Nigeria but we enjoy visiting and going back to base.
The guy was just caping with confidence.

Most of these guys have people they envy that have moved abroad. So they end up creating different negative scenarios (about the people they envy) in their heads so they can feel good about themselves.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by DoTheNeedful: 8:34am On Oct 25, 2025
trytillmake:
Baba thanks for this, that's means na to dey charge better money for remote jobs be dat.
You get it. You would enjoy those dollars more if you earn them in Nigeria through remote jobs or an export business.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by casualobserver: 8:34am On Oct 25, 2025
shogsman:
let him come back home na, 1.5m here and you're saying he'd have 2 drivers and a cook, so na wood dem go dey eat, what about his family, a single man spends 150-200k minimum for feeding monthly in Nigeria
I am assuming the figures are monthly. To start with if you earn $1000 a month in America you are poor, not just poor you are below poor, you are dead poor, by the time you pay rent, you may have to go to food banks to get food or turn off your heating in winter.

N1.5m in Nigeria is N18m a year. Even after tax that’s about N15 a year. Rent N4-5m a year leaves you with N10-11m or 800k a month. You are still many times better than someone in America on $1,000 a month.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by DoTheNeedful: 8:36am On Oct 25, 2025
Akalia:
What's your point cos I don't gerrithuh
My points are very clear. You have your reasons for not getting the points.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ZombieTAMER: 8:37am On Oct 25, 2025
Savenigeria2023:
Enough of these noise and comparisons.

If the conditions are better in Nigeria, the folks abroad will return. You don’t need to sweet talk them into returning.

Less than 2% of folks who left have returned, the remaining 98% who stayed back have their reasons. The government of the day should quit these japa propaganda and focus on making Nigeria work for Nigerians
They're looking for fools to pay ransom to kidnappers

bloody failed administration

Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Ten06(m): 8:38am On Oct 25, 2025
In Nigeria, it’s more likely the opposite. We pay very little for the same jobs that cost a fortune elsewhere. A driver might earn N80,000 a month, a nanny N50,000, and an electrician N20,000 per job. For the middle class, this affordability translates to convenience. But it also exposes a deeper issue: our economy depends on cheap labour to sustain comfort for a few.

You see, from the above statement, that’s why stealing from Ogas will not stop anytime soon in Nigeria. The amount being paid can hardly sustain them. The security guards and cleaners in my office receive ₦70,000 monthly, yet they are struggling to afford a single room to live in because of the high cost of living. Those earning ₦70,000 are even lucky — most offices don’t pay up to that amount.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Lekan239(m): 8:39am On Oct 25, 2025
Savenigeria2023:
Enough of these noise and comparisons.

If the conditions are better in Nigeria, the folks abroad will return. You don’t need to sweet talk them into returning.

Less than 2% of folks who left have returned, the remaining 98% who stayed back have their reasons. The government of the day should quit these japa propaganda and focus on making Nigeria work for Nigerians
lol, even inside Nigeria migration, not everybody that left the east or north to lagos, or West to port Harcourt. Goes back to their land even if they are struggling where they migrated to. They will rather stay there struggling than go back bcus of the fear people might laugh them for coming back eith nothing.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by DoTheNeedful: 8:39am On Oct 25, 2025
Procashtips:
Too many wrong comparisons here.

1k for haircut in Nigeria?
Then there are also places in the US you can have an haircut for 15 or 20.

Eat out 2k in Nigeria?
Then you can also eat out in the US for 5, 10 or even 15.
You don't need 10k salary to live and have a family with 2 children in the US. You can as well live with less than 5k.

Except you're claiming people in the US with at least 2 children earning from 6k upwards.
It is obvious that you have never lived in the US before, yet you are making bold statements about the economic realities of the place, perhaps, based on hearsay. You just want to argue for the sake of argument. It's people like you that make people with relevant information to keep shut.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by oloriooko(m): 8:41am On Oct 25, 2025
Tell me who and how many earn 1.5mil monthly in 9ja?
Am no in US but here in 9ja, how many of us earn monthly income of 1.5mil without side hussles and scamming, except you are a minister, rep, senator or oil company worker and few other professions
If i can earn 1.5mil monthly then am a big boy!
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Konquest: 8:47am On Oct 25, 2025
Great100000:
A few years ago, I was in a friend’s home somewhere in the U.S. We had just arrived from Nigeria, exhausted but glad to reconnect. After wrestling with the TV to catch a football game, hunger set in.

That was when we both realised there was no one to cook. No chef, no “mama Precious,” no one to send on an errand
.

My friend sighed, “See why I miss Naija.”

He had lived in the U.S. for nearly 20 years, owned a successful business, and had several properties. Yet, despite all that, he couldn’t replicate the everyday luxuries he enjoyed in Nigeria.

“Back home, I have two drivers and a chef, all for less than a million naira monthly,” he said. “Here, I’d pay ten times that, assuming I could even find people to do it.”


That conversation stayed with me because it captured the strange paradox of wealth and comfort across countries.

A Nigerian earning N1.5 million monthly, about $1,000, is considered lower middle class. They can rent a decent flat, hire domestic help, pay school fees, and still enjoy a weekend brunch.

But in the U.S., $1,000 barely covers groceries and gas. It’s roughly $6.50 an hour, far below the federal minimum wage. The same income that makes one comfortable in Lagos barely keeps another afloat in Texas.

This is the odd reality of global living standards. Wages in the West are higher because society is structured to sustain a broad middle class. People earn enough to afford the basics, which makes domestic labour expensive.


That’s why immigration is essential, as someone has to do the low-paying but necessary jobs. In fact, I recently read that the NVIDIA CEO Jenson Huang argued that plumbers and electricians are now the new millionaires, a testament to how valuable skilled manual work has become.

In Nigeria, it’s more likely the opposite. We pay very little for the same jobs that cost a fortune elsewhere. A driver might earn N80,000 a month, a nanny N50,000, and an electrician N20,000 per job. For the middle class, this affordability translates to convenience. But it also exposes a deeper issue: our economy depends on cheap labour to sustain comfort for a few.

It’s why a N1.5 million earner can feel rich here but still live in a system that doesn’t work. Their comfort is self-financed: generators for power, boreholes for water, and private schools for education.

In the U.S., someone earning the same $1,000 would struggle, but their rent, healthcare, and basic infrastructure are predictable. So, while the Nigerian looks richer, the American enjoys a higher quality of life, even if it means surviving on welfare.

This raises a curious question: if labour and services are this cheap, does it mean the naira is undervalued or that productivity is low? In theory, a weak currency and cheap wages should make Nigeria globally competitive.

It should help us export more and attract manufacturing jobs. But that only works if productivity is high. Instead, we use our cheap labour advantage to make domestic life comfortable — not to build export powerhouses.

The government’s recent move to double the minimum wage is welcome, but it barely scratches the surface. Inflation has already devoured much of the gain. Yet, Nigeria still remains one of the few places where services are relatively affordable despite rising costs.

This affordability, if properly channelled, could be a competitive advantage. We could produce more, export more, and create better-paying jobs — instead of relying on cheapness as our economic identity.

My friend eventually moved back to Nigeria. He said he missed “the freedom of comfort.” But he also admitted that every time the generator hummed through the night, or traffic trapped him for hours, he missed America’s quiet order. Maybe that’s the true story of our economy — comfort without structure, wealth without systems, luxury built on imbalance.

So who really lives better — the Nigerian earning N1.5 million or the American earning $1,000? It depends on what you call living. The Nigerian might eat better, rest better, and have more help. But the American lives in a system where those comforts are built into society, not paid for out of pocket.

Perhaps the goal shouldn’t be to choose one over the other, but to build a Nigeria where both comfort and structure coexist — where wages reflect productivity, not pity, and where enjoying life doesn’t depend on escaping dysfunction.

Source: https://nairametrics.com/2025/10/24/who-lives-better-income-of-n1-5m-in-nigeria-or-1k-in-the-us/
Summary:

So who really lives better — the Nigerian earning N1.5 million or the American earning $1,000? It depends on what you call living. The Nigerian might eat better, rest better, and have more help. But the American lives in a system where those comforts are built into society, not paid for out of pocket.

Perhaps the goal shouldn’t be to choose one over the other, but to build a Nigeria where both comfort and structure coexist — where wages reflect productivity, not pity, and where enjoying life doesn’t depend on escaping dysfunction.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Image123(m): 8:49am On Oct 25, 2025
SmartPolician:
Please stop making baseless comparisons. Nobody earns $1000 per month in America because it's even below the minimum wage. It's not like Nigeria where companies still pay #50k per month whereas the minimum wage is #70k.
You can earn $1000 in America. In depends on how many hours you worked and tax.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by FreeIgboho: 8:49am On Oct 25, 2025
OredoPikin2:
U cant make 1.5million naira in Nigeria for good 2yrs if u are on minimum wage
But in the usa u can make $1000 in less than a month on minimum wage there.
Pls lets switch
I pray God answer my prayers. Let me go to the USA and u return back to Nigeria. AMEN
The correct prayer is, let you be in US making minimum wage (less than $1000) while he's in Nigeria making N1.5m per month
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by SmartPolician: 8:51am On Oct 25, 2025
Image123:
You can earn $1000 in America. In depends on how many hours you worked and tax.
This discussion is about someone working for 22 - 25 days in a month (just as it is done in Nigeria) and how much they earn afterwards. Nobody earns $1k in America.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 8:53am On Oct 25, 2025
classicfrank4u:
Yes, and that's because even a sales girl at Walmart can easily make that $2500 monthly, in Naija even a professor in Neurosurgery doesn't earn 1.5m monthly.
easily and even that salesgirl making $2500 USD is a port salary that can't even give you a decent living in any USA city ..it's a poor and lowest salary



Let’s break this down carefully — because while $2,500/month (USD) might sound like a lot in some countries, in the United States it’s considered a low income, especially once taxes and cost of living are accounted for.




💰 1. Basic Context

Monthly income (gross): $2,500

Annual income (gross): $30,000

This is roughly $14.42/hour for full-time work (40 hrs/week).

The U.S. median individual income in 2024 is around $59,000/year, so $30,000 is about half that — putting you near or below the poverty line for many urban areas.



🧾 2. Taxes and Take-Home Pay

Let’s estimate federal, state, and FICA taxes for someone single with no dependents:

Category Approx. % Monthly Amount Notes

Federal Income Tax 6% $150 Varies by deductions
FICA (Social Security + Medicare) 7.65% $191 Standard payroll tax
State Tax (average) 3% $75 Higher in CA, NY, etc.


✅ Estimated Take-home Pay:
$2,500 – $416 = ~$2,084/month

So you’re really living on ~$2,000/month.


🏠 3. Typical Monthly Expenses (Average U.S. City)

Category Estimated Cost Notes

Rent (1-bedroom) $1,300 – $2,500 $1,500 avg in mid-size city; $2,500+ in big metros (NYC, LA, SF)
Utilities (gas, electric, water, internet, phone) $250 – $350 Basic living expenses
Food (groceries + occasional eating out) $400 – $600 Even frugal living
Transportation (gas, insurance, maintenance, or transit) $250 – $400 Depends on location and car
Health insurance (if not employer-paid) $300 – $600 Essential and expensive
Miscellaneous (clothing, hygiene, etc.) $100 – $200 Minimal spending
Emergency savings / debt / entertainment $100 – $200 Realistic cushion


🔹 Total: $2,400 – $4,000/month

You can see the issue: even in a moderately priced city, $2,500/month gross barely covers basic rent and food — and you end up with nothing left for savings, healthcare, or emergencies.


🏙️ 4. City-by-City Comparison

City Typical 1-BR Rent Left After Rent (Net $2,084)

New York, NY $3,200 -$1,116 (deficit)
Los Angeles, CA $2,400 -$316
Dallas, TX $1,400 ~$684
Atlanta, GA $1,500 ~$584
Des Moines, IA $1,000 ~$1,084
Rural Midwest $700 ~$1,384


Only in small towns or low-cost regions could $2,500/month sustain a modest lifestyle.


🧮 5. Reality Check: Living on $2,500/month

At this level:

You likely live paycheck to paycheck

No room for saving, investing, or emergencies

Hard to afford vacations, major purchases, or medical bills

Can easily fall into debt with one unexpected expense


In short:
$2,500/month is a survival income in the U.S., not a comfortable one — especially in urban or coastal regions.


💡 6. What Would a Comfortable Income Be?

To live comfortably (basic needs + some savings) in most U.S. cities, you’d need:

Area Type Comfortable Monthly Gross Income

Rural / small town $3,500 – $4,000
Mid-size city $4,500 – $6,000
Major metro (NYC, LA, SF) $7,000 – $10,000+
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Image123(m): 8:55am On Oct 25, 2025
Goo0dHardDick:
So why are you still in the US?

Dude enter the next flight and come back here where 1.5m Will pay your bills and rent in Nigeria. You think the rent people pay in lekki for just a sef con for 2million is a joke?

Come back here home bro
It's different strokes for different folks. We can't all be in Nigeria, or all abroad. Same also for prosperity/making it. Everybody cannot make it in any country.
He might not be making $1000 BTW. If he has his needs met or has better prospects, why do you think he must come home now? Many people like Mr President, some governors, that IT guy Ayobeji or something. They all came back to Nigeria. Again, different strokes for different folks.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Image123(m): 8:56am On Oct 25, 2025
SmartPolician:
This discussion is about someone working for 22 - 25 days in a month (just as it is done in Nigeria) and how much they earn afterwards. Nobody earns $1k in America.
You assumed that, it's not stated anywhere.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ZombieDredd: 8:56am On Oct 25, 2025
LabStores:
Definitely, Nigeria
Because of standard of living
But, it quite easy to earn a thousand dollars abroad than 1.5m in Nigeria
So what will 1000naira of your currency buy you, if standard of living is better in Nigeria?

compare it with 1000dollars what it will get an American.

Then check if you are telling yourself the teuth
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by VeeVeeMyLuv(m):
MartinCorridon:
You need a refund of your school fees from the MiraKuru Center you attended....

Does every person in Nigeria live in a place like Lekki ?

You can't think that this discourse is meant to assess people in general / the average person ?

Did they specify people living in Manhattan, USA?
You too how many Nigerians earn 1.5m per month? Just a handful, you guys will now be using this insignificant number to generalize.

Why are you like this? It clearly shows you lack empathy. E no good o,
U have family o, one day you will carry this behaviour home and manifest, u can't disguise for too long. Change before it is too late.

Moderators will see your comment and not ban you because you are defending a govt.

All of you allow one man to buy you all up.

If you want to do a proper comparison bring the same class in America and compare. What you just did is comparing 70,000 minimum wage with 1.5m monthly in salary in Nigeria. It is wicked! Stop it before it is too late. If you don't know this behaviour you are doing dey enter your gene becoming hard coded to your DNA genetic make up.

1.5m per month in Nigeria is almost close to high class.

Compare America higher middle class with Nigeria higher Middle class let's see.

You wonder why Nigeria is backward because of such crooked genes.


Income or salary please 🙏🏽
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 9:00am On Oct 25, 2025
Image123:
You can earn $1000 in America. In depends on how many hours you worked and tax.
$2,500 a Month Is Still Poverty in America

People love to say that $2,500 a month is “enough to live on.” But in today’s America, that amount barely covers the basics — and in most cities, it’s a straight-up poverty wage.

Let’s break it down: $2,500 a month equals $30,000 a year before taxes. After taxes, you’re left with maybe $2,100–$2,200 a month. Now try stretching that across rent, food, transportation, and health care in any major U.S. city.

Rent: The average one-bedroom apartment costs over $1,700/month nationwide — and that’s much higher in places like New York, Los Angeles, or Seattle, where prices easily hit $2,500+.

Groceries: Expect to spend at least $400–$600 a month just to eat decently.

Transportation: Car payments, insurance, gas, or even public transit add another $300–$500.

Health care: Without good employer coverage, premiums and copays can eat hundreds more.


Add it up, and that $2,500 is gone before you’ve even thought about savings, emergencies, or a night out. Forget owning a home, starting a family, or paying off student debt — you’re just surviving.

What’s worse, wages like this are common, especially in service jobs that keep our cities running: baristas, delivery drivers, caregivers, and retail workers. These are the people serving coffee, cleaning offices, and helping children and the elderly — yet they can’t afford the cities they live in.

Calling $2,500 a month “enough” is ignoring reality. It’s not laziness or bad budgeting — it’s an economy where full-time workers still live in poverty. Until wages rise to match the actual cost of living — closer to $4,000–$5,000 a month in most urban areas — America will keep having millions of “working poor” who are doing everything right but can’t get ahead.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by davinchecodes(m): 9:00am On Oct 25, 2025
Rilwayne001:
Even 2k$ na poverty.

Average rent alone in California for example na $2000 monthly.
California, New York is like Abuja and Lagos
And besides you should be making minimum of 4k per month if you are residing there.
Which is easy.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by Image123(m): 9:03am On Oct 25, 2025
ariesbull:
$2,500 a Month Is Still Poverty in America

People love to say that $2,500 a month is “enough to live on.” But in today’s America, that amount barely covers the basics — and in most cities, it’s a straight-up poverty wage.

Let’s break it down: $2,500 a month equals $30,000 a year before taxes. After taxes, you’re left with maybe $2,100–$2,200 a month. Now try stretching that across rent, food, transportation, and health care in any major U.S. city.

Rent: The average one-bedroom apartment costs over $1,700/month nationwide — and that’s much higher in places like New York, Los Angeles, or Seattle, where prices easily hit $2,500+.

Groceries: Expect to spend at least $400–$600 a month just to eat decently.

Transportation: Car payments, insurance, gas, or even public transit add another $300–$500.

Health care: Without good employer coverage, premiums and copays can eat hundreds more.


Add it up, and that $2,500 is gone before you’ve even thought about savings, emergencies, or a night out. Forget owning a home, starting a family, or paying off student debt — you’re just surviving.

What’s worse, wages like this are common, especially in service jobs that keep our cities running: baristas, delivery drivers, caregivers, and retail workers. These are the people serving coffee, cleaning offices, and helping children and the elderly — yet they can’t afford the cities they live in.

Calling $2,500 a month “enough” is ignoring reality. It’s not laziness or bad budgeting — it’s an economy where full-time workers still live in poverty. Until wages rise to match the actual cost of living — closer to $4,000–$5,000 a month in most urban areas — America will keep having millions of “working poor” who are doing everything right but can’t get ahead.
But i never asked for or denied these explanation sir. i simply stated that it's possible to earn $1000 in the US.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 9:04am On Oct 25, 2025
davinchecodes:
California, New York is like Abuja and Lagos
And besides you should be making minimum of 4k per month if you are residing there.
Which is easy.
Let's get the perspective...even if you easily make it which I doubt cos of the high level of homelessness there... You still spend it without saving !


California and New York are two of the richest states in America — but for many people, earning $3,000 a month (about $36,000 a year) still means living in poverty.

Think about it: the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment is around $2,500 in Los Angeles and over $3,000 in New York City. After paying rent, you might have just a few hundred dollars left for food, transportation, healthcare, and everything else. That’s not living — that’s surviving.

Groceries, gas, and utilities are all far above the national average, and even a modest lifestyle can quickly drain a paycheck. When basic expenses cost so much, $3,000 feels like minimum wage, not middle class.

The sad truth is, in states like California and New York, poverty isn’t just about unemployment — it’s about unaffordability. You can work full-time, do everything right, and still fall behind. Until housing and living costs come down, “making it” in these places will stay out of reach for millions.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ZombieDredd: 9:04am On Oct 25, 2025
SmartPolician:
This discussion is about someone working for 22 - 25 days in a month (just as it is done in Nigeria) and how much they earn afterwards. Nobody earns $1k in America.
They earn above 1k monthly
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 9:05am On Oct 25, 2025
Image123:
But i never asked for or denied these explanation sir. i simply stated that it's possible to earn $1000 in the US.
and earning that is even super poor! That's the lowest poverty in USA
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by NairaMaster1(m): 9:07am On Oct 25, 2025
Savenigeria2023:
Enough of these noise and comparisons.

If the conditions are better in Nigeria, the folks abroad will return. You don’t need to sweet talk them into returning.

Less than 2% of folks who left have returned, the remaining 98% who stayed back have their reasons. The government of the day should quit these japa propaganda and focus on making Nigeria work for Nigerians
They are talking about people with money and not poor people.

Would you tell Obi cabana to relocate? Japa is for poor people.

I visited my uncle in the UK and hes alarm near his bed. Who on the tap? Off the extra light. What kind of life.

We were going for shopping and he said we should use the public transport but I insisted that we must use his car. I paid for the shopping and the park space.

See, japa is for hopeless people. There are so many rich and comfortable rich young men in Nigeria. Young business and property owners.

It's only a poor and an unfortunate man in Nigeria who think japa is the only way out of poverty.

Ask yourself the reason why the like of Davido and co only visit?
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ValD25(m): 9:08am On Oct 25, 2025
DoTheNeedful:
You get it. You would enjoy those dollars more if you earn them in Nigeria through remote jobs or an export business.
Boss abeg I have an interest in export business, how can I contact you please, thanks u!
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 9:11am On Oct 25, 2025
Hismercy234:
Instead of seeing the opportunities in Nigeria you are seeing it as useless, Tor, to u it will be useless if that is how you see it but to the people who see wealth in it Will surely amass the wealth
But wait a minute... Stop listening to those clowns


How many people ever became rich in Nigeria made their money in abroad? Not even up to 2%


98% of the rich people made their money in Nigeria and that's why there is tons of opportunity! It's only an idiot that would sell his properties and raise over 40 million and use it to travel abroad to start hutsling from the lowest jobs only to start thinking of buying house in Nigeria again and resettling in Nigeria at some years


That's stupidity
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by VeeVeeMyLuv(m):
FreeIgboho:
The correct prayer is, let you be in US making minimum wage (less than $1000) while he's in Nigeria making N1.5m per month
Can random nobody just start earning 1.5m naira monthly just like that both in public and private sector in Nigeria? Do your findings. Shebi one of your fellow defenders just said in America you can earn $1000 usd depending on how many hours you put in.

Can you do this in Nigeria without knowing anybody ? No! These days even cleaner jobs you must know somebody, they don turn am to family and friends workplace. Mind you private sector has joined in this behavior. Where you wan even see the per hour job for naija sef.

How many earn 1.5m in Nigeria to start with.
Maybe in your circle of family and friends most of them earn that much, granted. The problem is now using your circle to generalize for the whole Nigeria. That is thoughtless and wicked.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 9:13am On Oct 25, 2025
NairaMaster1:
They are talking about people with money and not poor people.

Would you tell Obi cabana to relocate? Japa is for poor people.

I visited my uncle in the UK and hes alarm near his bed. Who on the tap? Off the extra light. What kind of life.

We were going for shopping and he said we should use the public transport but I insisted that we must use his car. I paid for the shopping and the park space.

See, japa is for hopeless people. There are so many rich and comfortable rich young men in Nigeria. Young business and property owners.

It's only a poor and an unfortunate man in Nigeria who think japa is the only way out of poverty.

Ask yourself the reason why the like of Davido and co only visit?
Big boys don't relocate abroad... They just visit ! You can't be making money in Nigeria and leave it to go and be doing care jobs and driving under under cold in USA or UK

It's better to reign in hell than being a servant in heaven
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by lawani(m): 9:17am On Oct 25, 2025
There is no basis for comparison because you can't even pay your rent if you earn 1k dollars per month in the USA while a man earning 1.5 million naira per month in Nigeria is a big man maybe a CEO.
Re: Who Lives Better: Income Of ₦1.5 Million In Nigeria Or $1,000 In The US? by ariesbull: 9:17am On Oct 25, 2025
VeeVeeMyLuv:
Can random nobody just start earning 1.5m naira monthly just like that both in public and private sector in Nigeria? Do your findings. Shebi one of your fellow defenders just said in America you can earn $1000 usd depending on how many hours you put in.

Can you do this in Nigeria without knowing anybody ? No! These days even cleaner jobs you must know somebody, they don turn am to family and friends workplace. Mind private sector has joined in this behavior. Where you wan even see the per hour job for naira sef.

How many earn 1.5m in Nigeria to start with.
Maybe in your circle of family and friends most of them earn that much, granted. The problem is now using your circle to generalize for the whole Nigeria. That is thoughtless and wicked.
People are even making that 1.5 million a week in Nigeria doing legit... Go to market, go to computer village, ladipo etc ...

I know someone that have bar that make that weekly ... Oga people are making it huge ! Just surround yourself with employers


You can't make money earning wages .... You can't be rich earning salaries be it in USA or Nigeria
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