A combined photo of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the Director General of Bureau of Public Procurement, Dr Adebowale Adedokun
Development, like charity, must begin at home. This principle guides the Bureau of Public Procurement’s championing of community-based procurement, a reform designed to empower local businesses in serving their own regions.
Under the leadership of Director General, Dr Adebowale Adedokun, this initiative actively roots public spending in grassroots enterprise, perfectly aligning with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda and its vision for inclusive, national growth. President Tinubu’s approbation of this policy a few weeks ago has prompted the Bureau to deploy the policy in earnest.
In truth, no one can argue against the fact that local communities possess an intimate understanding of their own needs and challenges. A contractor from Zamfara brings essential knowledge of the local terrain to a borehole project. Builders in Enugu are familiar with the most suitable regional materials for a new public infrastructure. Generic, national tenders can often overlook this vital, place-based wisdom.
To harness this potential, community-based procurement reserves a proportion of smaller contracts specifically for qualified indigenous firms within defined geographic zones. Where applicable, local governments can prioritise suppliers and labour from the project’s immediate community, provided they meet clear quality and value thresholds. This ensures that the economic benefits of public investment circulate within the local economy, creating a powerful multiplier effect.
Without a doubt the advantages are transformative. Jobs remain within the community, allowing skills and prosperity to build sustainably. Rural economies gain momentum, reducing pressures for migration. This approach tackles unemployment directly, offering experience to youth and opportunity for women-led enterprises and village cooperatives. It is a practical complement to wider affirmative and local content policies, weaving community strength directly into the national procurement fabric.
Budget efficiency also improves. Shorter, more reliable supply chains reduce logistical costs and delays. Crucially, when local people are invested as partners in a project’s execution, they develop a stronger sense of ownership. This leads to better maintenance and care of completed assets, ensuring infrastructure endures.
To safeguard the process, the BPP has established clear guidelines. These define eligible zones, contract values, and mandatory capacity assessments to ensure competence. Larger projects rightly remain open to national competition. The Bureau provides training for Ministries, Departments and Agencies on implementation, while its rigorous monitoring, supported by transparency on the Nigeria Open Contracting Portal, NOCOPO, counters any risk of cronyism.
Ultimately, this reform proves that governance can listen to the grassroots. It turns public funds into community capital, fostering a deeper trust in government as citizens witness tangible, local transformation. By positioning procurement as a catalyst for community vitality, the BPP ensures that national development is not just delivered to the people, but is built by them, creating progress that is personal, sustainable, and truly enduring.
● Sufuyan Ojeifo is a journalist, publisher of THE CONCLAVE online newspaper, and communications consultant.

