Beyond Seasonal Hype: Structuring Africa’s Fashion and Tourism Economies

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Prince Femi Fadina’s piece, “Detty December Is Fading And Our Own Greed Is Pulling The Plug,” speaks with rare clarity. It reads as both a love letter to Lagos and a call for national discipline. That balance is patriotism. Patriotism lives in the quiet work of building a future worth celebrating.

 

The argument lands because the numbers support it.

 

Tourism contributes 2.5% to Nigeria’s GDP, about $5 billion in 2023, far below the African average of 8%. Detty December spending reached roughly $1.2 billion in 2022, yet repeat visitor rates fell from 38% to 24% by 2024. A 10% rise in hotel rates now correlates with a 7% fall in bookings, according to the World Bank.

 

The result has been predictable. Value thinned, costs rose, and visitors adjusted their choices accordingly.

 

I agree that unchecked greed is eroding the brand that was built. But one factor remains missing. Structure.

 

At CAFA, we are mapping a 10 year roadmap for Africa’s fashion economy. Design clusters. Financing pipelines. Market access. Tourism requires the same level of coordination and discipline. Creativity without structure cannot sustain growth.

 

The remedies are not abstract. They are visible, tested, and within reach.

 

Seasonal price caps and tax incentives for off-peak bookings. Integrated transport, hospitality, and experience corridors. Enforced national service standards. Coordinated diaspora marketing tied to fashion weeks. Real time demand and pricing dashboards for operators. These approaches are already working across Africa.

 

Fashion and tourism follow the same logic.

 

CAFA’s 10 year plan rests on Pan-African policy and fashion infrastructure. This includes an African Fashion Industry Development Fund, strategic cotton belts, connected value chains, IP protection and management, design clusters, financing pipelines, and global market access. Tourism can apply this same playbook by building experience clusters that combine music, fashion, and food into a cohesive story.

 

Within this vision sits the African Global Fashion Games.

 

Created by the Lai Labode Heritage Foundation under CAFA’s Afroliganza plans, the Games are positioned as the world’s first Fashion Olympics. They invite global participation through healthy competition to drive investment, creativity, and structured growth across Africa’s fashion value chain. The platform functions as a talent pipeline, an investor marketplace, and a standards laboratory aligned with CAFA’s roadmap.

 

Policy progress is already visible.

 

The Confederation of African Fashion Charter has been signed, with Nigeria as the first and leading signatory. Nigeria is establishing the Nigerian Fashion Federation in alignment with CAFA to structure the fashion economy and unlock jobs, exports, and cultural capital. Other African countries are expected to sign through 2026.

 

This work is strengthened by leadership.

 

Minister Hannatu Musa Musawa, Minister of Arts, Culture, Tourism and Creative Economy, has remained a consistent champion of structure within the creative industries. Her role is central to turning policy frameworks into enforceable and funded programs.

 

Across government, culture, and enterprise, several leaders continue to drive this agenda forward. Obi Asika, through his work at the National Council for Arts and Culture, has consistently positioned Nigeria’s cultural identity as a source of soft power and economic value. In Lagos State, Honourable Idris Aregbe continues to translate policy into action, strengthening tourism, heritage, and the creative economy through active stakeholder engagement and platforms such as Lagos Culture Week. Charles Orasanye’s expansion of Style Business from Nigeria into Abidjan and Dakar reflects a growing pan-African creative infrastructure, rooted in enterprise, collaboration, and shared prosperity. Alongside this, Seyi Vodi’s influence as one of Africa’s leading fashion entrepreneurs underscores the commercial scale, craftsmanship, and global visibility Nigerian fashion is now commanding.

 

Detty December was a spark. The rest of the year must become the fuel.

 

Cultural capital demands long term commitment, not seasonal exploitation. Policy, profit, and pride must move together. The world is watching. So are our wallets.

 

Stay stylish. Stay structured.

 

Aare Lai (Dr) Lai Labode

President, Confederation of African Fashion (CAFA)

 

 

 

Notes

 

Confederation of African Fashion (CAFA) is a continental platform led by Aare (Dr) Lai Labode as President. CAFA is active and in development, with extensive work already underway to build a unified and structured fashion economy for Africa.

 

Aare Lai (Dr) Lai Labode

President, Confederation of African Fashion (CAFA)

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