Despite the fact that an average Nigerian live on less than $2 per day,
however, London evening standard, a popular UK tabloid recently revealed
that wealthy Nigerians spend over £5000 (N1.3M) on sweets, chocolates, shoes, bag and other stupid irrelevant luxury items on each visit to London.
It doesn’t end there, some of these addicted, dump, stupid and greedy
shoppers like the lady that was interview, Simi Osomo visit the UK more
than 6 times in a year to blow over N15M on shopping, making visitors
from Nigeria are the UK’s fourth biggest foreign spenders and four times
what UK shoppers typically spend.
QUOTE:
Every year, Simi Osomo makes six trips to London from Nigeria. The
25-year-old spends about two weeks here and every day she goes
shopping. Today she’s at the boutique shop Matches Townhouse in Marylebone with a personal shopper.
“When it comes to shopping and Nigerians, I can tell you it’s just what
we have to do,” she tells me while admiring the patterned dresses.
For
Nigerians, London is a shopping mecca. Visitors from the West African
country are the UK’s fourth biggest foreign spenders, parting with an
average of £500 in each luxury shop they visit — four times what UK
shoppers typically spend.
When I ask Osomo how much a two-week
shopping trip in London costs she makes a bashful face. “Ooh, should I
really be saying this? It depends, but most times about £5,000.”
Osomo is wearing a green top from Zara that’s “the colour of the Nigerian flag”, blue skinny jeans and new Christian Louboutin shoes. Later today she’s going to buy an iPhone 5 for her sister.
“You
can get lots of things in Lagos but they are cheaper here and you get
to take a holiday and relax a bit. It’s only six hours away.” The number
of Nigerian visitors to the UK increased by more than 50 per cent to
142,000 a year between 1991 and 2011, according to the Office for
National Statistics.
Nigeria is projected to become Africa’s
biggest economy by next year and the world’s fifth most populous country
by 2050, and London is cashing in.
Debenhams’
Oxford Street branch has put up signs in Hausa, one of the official
Nigerian languages, and said customers from this part of West Africa are
its biggest overseas spenders.
Yet Osomo says it’s not just
rich Nigerians who come over. “Middle-class people can afford to come
and spend £600 on shopping in a week here. What I like about the UK is
that it doesn’t discriminate.
As long as you’re able to prove you have an income, accommodation in London
and a return ticket, the authorities are more than willing to give you a
visa. It’s closer than America and the customer service here is
phenomenal.”
Back home in Lagos, the technology market
has been flooded with fake products from China, which means more people
are coming to London for electronic goods and are even taking items
back to sell.
“No one wants to spend more than 100,000 naira
(£390) and find out it is fake, so they prefer to come over for a
holiday and buy something they know is real and has a guarantee in case
something goes wrong.”
Marks & Spencer is one of Osomo’s
favourite shops. “I love their fajitas. You can’t get them in Nigeria. I
also buy soy sauce and Thai green curry paste, which is good because it lasts for a long time.
Oh,
and Crunchy Nut cereal, Skittles, Maltesers and tea. There’s nothing
like a British cuppa. I get Lipton, PG and green tea.” She likes the
variety of London. “I love Zara, H&M, Topshop. But if I want
something more high end, there’s Sloane Street.”
More than £3
billion a year is spent on high-end goods in London, according to the
London Luxury Quarter Report, and it predicts this will rise to £4.5
billion by 2020, with new shops including Burberry’s flagship fuelling
the trend.
Luxury concierge services are also popular. Osomo is a client of Quintessentially, which organises shopping trips and parties for her and has an office in Lagos.
Although
summer is the height of the shopping season, Osomo likes to come back
for the January sales too. Her mother, a lawyer, and father, a
businessman, often join her.
She has just finished a law degree and is about to start a job in fashion journalism, which she hopes will give her enough holidays for trips to London. But flights can get booked up quickly.
“You
don’t want to get the Lagos to London flight in July. It’s packed with
parents and their kids making noise.” Return flights at high season
start at about £369.
But what about getting her haul of shopping
back from London to Lagos? That, says Osomo, is costly. “All I pack
when I come over is one pair of jeans and three tops.
I bring
two big suitcases but I always have to get another one and pay for
excess baggage. I never learn.” British Airways has increased its excess
baggage charge on flights from London to Lagos from £40 to £97 per
suitcase in the past year. “They must have realised we always put an
extra bag in and thought they’d try to make money out of it,” says
Osomo.
Fashion-wise, she still picks up the odd item in Nigeria.
Six months ago Zara opened an outlet store in Lagos, and Mango has been
there for about a year. “Zara is affordable because it’s an outlet but
what I find is that things are a bit last season.
Nigeria’s hot
all the time so there are always maxi dresses and swimwear but the
colours are boring and we lack variety. Customer service is not great
and some shops can get really crowded, which is challenging.”
There
is a burgeoning online shopping industry in Nigeria too. Currently,
ASOS is the only shop that ships to Lagos free of charge and everyone
Osomo’s age uses it.
“Nigeria is a fun place, I’d encourage
people to go. Shopping is evolving. In five years I think a lot of
stores will come to Nigeria because there is a gap in the market.
Ten
years ago I never thought Zara would come to Nigeria. I believe in the
next five years we will catch up. But I still love London and won’t stop
coming here.