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Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by seunmsg(op): 7:24am On Jan 30
“As Tinubu gears up to run for a second term in 2027, a spate of painful reforms is beginning to show results.”

When Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999, Olusegun Obasanjo, the elected president, set out to clean up the economy after years of mismanagement by military governments. Initially dismissed by critics, by the end of his second term Mr Obasanjo’s liberal policies had tamed inflation, spurred investment and raised annual GDP growth to around 7%. It didn’t last.

Over the past decade GDP per person has fallen. Yet evidence is now mounting that another stretch of “golden years”, as one analyst calls the period following Mr Obasanjo’s liberalisation, may be on the cards.

In the past two and a half years Bola Tinubu, who in Mr Obasanjo’s day was the governor of Lagos and was elected president in 2023, has been enacting his own set of structural reforms. As he gears up to run for a second term in 2027, they may be starting to pay off.

It is difficult to overstate the mess Mr Tinubu inherited. When he took office in 2023, the country’s central bank had $7bn (equivalent to 1.4% of gdp at the time) in obligations it could not meet, prompting international investors to flee en masse. The bank’s credibility had been dented by a recklessly loose monetary policy, its mismanagement of dwindling foreign-exchange reserves and efforts to maintain an unsustainable tiered exchange-rate system. In 2022 alone the cash-strapped government spent some $10bn, equivalent to 2.2% of GDP, on a ruinous fuel subsidy.

To fix things, Mr Tinubu’s government got on with a package of drastic structural reforms. It abolished the fuel subsidy and abandoned that multi-tiered system of dollar-pegged exchange rates, largely allowing the naira to float.

The central bank aggressively tightened monetary policy to curb the resulting bout of inflation. The government also moved to improve security in the Niger Delta and offered a range of tax incentives to investors to boost dwindling oil production.

Nearly three years on, Nigeria’s 230m people, especially the poor and the middle class, are still reeling from increases in fuel and food prices. Poverty has risen. But it looks as though Mr Tinubu’s bitter medicine is helping. The annual inflation rate, which hit a nearly 30-year high of 34.8% in December 2024, fell to 15.2% in December 2025.

Adedayo Adeyeye: Nigeria Was On The Brink Of Collapse, Tinubu Rescued It With Courageous Reforms
Growth is returning. The IMF expects the economy to expand by 4.4% in 2026. Following two steep devaluations in 2023, the naira has stabilised. The central bank’s foreign-exchange reserves have risen to $46bn, their highest level in seven years.

Improvements in macroeconomic stability are restoring investor confidence. On January 22nd Shell, a British company, said it hopes in 2027 to finalise plans, with partners, to develop a $20bn offshore oilfield that has been sitting untapped for over 20 years. Exxon Mobil, an American firm, has committed $1.5bn to deepwater development until 2027.

Local business leaders are more upbeat, too. Oil-and-gas production is rising, much of it driven by local firms plugging leaks and improving output in onshore projects in the Niger Delta, which has become safer thanks to Mr Tinubu’s focus on security there.

All this should give the government some fiscal breathing room, particularly as the cheaper naira begins to raise the competitiveness of Nigeria’s non-oil exports such as cocoa and cashew nuts.

Recent reforms to taxation and tax collection, Mr Tinubu’s latest project, should help improve revenues further in the coming years. Falling inflation should eventually begin to ease the cost-of-living pain.

However, even optimists have plenty of reasons to be cautious. Savings from the fuel subsidy have largely been spent on servicing the public debt, which is still rising as the government continues to borrow against future sales of oil to fund its deficit. Currently, some 60% of revenues are consumed by debt service.

On January 20th Nigeria’s finance minister said the government hoped to borrow less this year, but current budget projections suggest that is not realistic. “The government is broke. There’s nothing to invest in the future, that’s the truth,” says Esili Eigbe of Escap, a Nigerian consultancy.

Unless the government cuts civil-service salaries, another big chunk of spending, or is able to restructure loans to make them cheaper, the extra revenue from recent tax reforms looks unlikely to be available for improving infrastructure or to pay for public health care and education. “They’ve brought the deficit down, but they don’t seem to show any greater ability to get capital projects out of the door,“ says David Cowan, an economist at Citi, an American bank.

All this means that it will take a long time for ordinary Nigerians, who until now have mostly borne the pain of Mr Tinubu’s reforms, to feel any benefit.

Buying food has been a particular struggle, not just for the 42% of Nigerians who live on less than $3 a day, the World Bank’s definition of extreme poverty, but also for the urban middle class. The price of a kilo of rice has nearly quadrupled since May 2023, while wages have barely budged. Even though inflation is now falling, many still struggle to afford enough to eat.

Mr Obasanjo’s reforms in the early 2000s aimed to increase economic dynamism and improve people’s lives by attracting fresh capital investment into newly privatised sectors. By the end of his second term in 2007, domestic companies were worth $85bn, up from $3bn in 1999.

Mr Tinubu, by contrast, has so far focused on restoring stability and reviving the country’s ailing oil-and-gas sector. To bring about more golden years for Nigerians, he needs to go beyond that.
https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2026/01/29/nigerias-economy-may-be-back-from-the-brink

Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by BlocksNG(m): 7:31am On Jan 30
before FreeStuffsNG starts jubilating, the word "may" connotes uncertainty.

Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by seunmsg(op):
Over the past decade GDP per person has fallen. Yet evidence is now mounting that another stretch of “golden years”, as one analyst calls the period following Mr Obasanjo’s liberalisation, may be on the cards.
We are not there yet but we are surely on our way there. That’s why all Nigerians who want to see a better future for the country must rally round Mr. President to continue in office till 2031. We must stay the course so as to ensure that the coming golden years are not derailed.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by seunmsg(op): 7:40am On Jan 30
BlocksNG:
before FreeStuffsNG starts jubilating, the word "may" connotes uncertainty.
It’s a cautious word that signifies possibility of what can happen. Tinubu cannot realistically solve all of Nigerias problems in less than three years. They are simply telling you that the president is going in the right direction and if we stay the course, the golden years are about to come.

This is what should interest all Nigerians as we access the performance of Mr. President and make up our minds on who should lead us from 2027-2031. Recovering from the economic mess that Tinubu inherited in 2023 won’t be a sprint. It’s a long marathon that entails rigorous economic reforms and policies. All indices are now showing we are on course to full recovery and economic prosperity. It is left for us to ensure this is not derailed.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by helinues: 7:41am On Jan 30
Remove maybe, it's back gradually. Nigerians are feeling it, I mean productive people.

Those who have been nagging online daily are people who are just there like a tree
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by femi4: 7:42am On Jan 30
Future impossble tense
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Gotocourt: 7:42am On Jan 30
The economy is actually picking up but middle men are reaping people off. I observed some things are cheaper in super market than shops and market stall angry. Prices have dropped since last year at distributors warehouses but greedy shop owners ain't backing out. Car parts sellers are increasing prices though not all.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by DeltaFire: 7:44am On Jan 30
The Economist is a fake prophet!

Nigeria economy is getting worser every day. People are calling to beg for money.

Cement cost is high.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Dannyset(m): 7:44am On Jan 30
Children of perdition will come and cry now 😂😂😂
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by mp3ree: 7:45am On Jan 30
seunmsg:
It’s a cautious word that signifies possibility of what can happen. Tinubu cannot realistically solve all of Nigerias problems in less than three years. They are simply telling you that the president is going in the right direction and if we stay the course, the golden years are about to come.
To some people this news taste like bitter leaves.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by BlackPhanter: 7:45am On Jan 30
As painful as it is for me to do, I have to admit that the economic reforms being done by Tinubu's government is yielding positive results. Especially with the stabilization of the naira again the USD . We can now use our naira cards to make international purchases. This among several other things.
One major thing that can move the country forward economically is to cure the festering disease of insecurity and corruption.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by AMINDA: 7:47am On Jan 30
All this procured articles with carefully inputed plausible deniability clauses like "may" will not save Tinubu come 2027.

Today, Nigeria is the fifth largest economy in Africa. We were number one barely 3 years ago.

Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by seunmsg(op): 7:50am On Jan 30
mp3ree:
To some people this news taste like bitter leaves.
We have to continue to pushback against their bitterness. We must never allow their false narrative to become mainstream or go unchallenged. We have a duty to Nigeria to ensure this economic recovery is not derailed.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by wman(m): 7:52am On Jan 30
seunmsg:
It’s a cautious word that signifies possibility of what can happen. Tinubu cannot realistically solve all of Nigerias problems in less than three years. They are simply telling you that the president is going in the right direction and if we stay the course, the golden years are about to come.

This is what should interest all Nigerians as we access the performance of Mr. President and make up our minds on who should lead us from 2027-2031. Recovering from the economic mess that Tinubu inherited in 2023 won’t be a sprint. It’s a long marathon that entails rigorous economic reforms and policies. All indices are now showing we are on course to full recovery and economic prosperity. It is left for us to ensure this is not derailed.
So what did Bubari and APC achieve economic wise in the 12 years that you've spent in power?
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by seunmsg(op): 7:55am On Jan 30
BlackPhanter:
As painful as it is for me to do, I have to admit that the economic reforms being done by Tinubu's government is yielding positive results. Especially with the stabilization of the naira again the USD . We can now use our naira cards to make international purchases. This among several other things.
One major thing that can move the country forward economically is to cure the festering disease of insecurity and corruption.
Insecurity is being dealt with. Sadly, there is a political and ethno-religious angle to the problem. It’s the same pattern of always using insecurity to destabilize the government of a southern president once election is around the corner. If there is any president that has the courage to tackle this problem courageously, it is Bola Tinubu. The approach may be cautious, but I believe he will solve the insecurity problem.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by InvestSmart(f): 7:57am On Jan 30
Hmmmm 🤔.

I guess you mean some Nigerians are feeling it (positively) like your self, while others are feeling heat like fire🤷🏽‍♀️
helinues:
Remove maybe, it's back gradually. Nigerians are feeling it, I mean productive people.

Those who have been nagging online daily are people who are just there like a tree
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by NOETHNICITY(m): 8:03am On Jan 30
This news is gonna offend the Monday sit at home crowd
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by watchindelta(m): 8:04am On Jan 30
Without light and security! Pretending and foolishness talk be this. Without light and security and less corruption 👌 you nigeria are joking 😳 no economy survive with does 3.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Afonja007: 8:07am On Jan 30
Is
seunmsg:
It’s a cautious word that signifies possibility of what can happen. Tinubu cannot realistically solve all of Nigerias problems in less than three years. They are simply telling you that the president is going in the right direction and if we stay the course, the golden years are about to come.

This is what should interest all Nigerians as we access the performance of Mr. President and make up our minds on who should lead us from 2027-2031. Recovering from the economic mess that Tinubu inherited in 2023 won’t be a sprint. It’s a long marathon that entails rigorous economic reforms and policies. All indices are now showing we are on course to full recovery and economic prosperity. It is left for us to ensure this is not derailed.
did Tinubu inherit economic waste from saint buhari? I thought agbadorians tagged anybody who complained about buhari's fulanization of Nigeria wailers or people from dot region,today Tinubu is yorubanization ,e go better oo undecided
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Obaofaba: 8:08am On Jan 30
DeltaFire:
The Economist is a fake prophet!

Nigeria economy is getting worser every day. People are calling to beg for money.

Cement cost is high.
Poor man, how much do you have that people are calling to beg you for?

Unless you are being economical with the truth, things are getting better and the economy is stable.

Tinubu will win the next election because of his policies.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by anonimi:
BlocksNG:
before FreeStuffsNG starts jubilating, the word "may" connotes uncertainty.
We can expect to see more of these sponsored MAYBE good news about our country as we move towards 2027 for Tinubu’s reelection before he tries to make himself life president through a 3rd term agenda that Obasanjo failed to achieve, despite his Ghana must go bags of bribes to senators and representatives.

Was it Atiku that helped secure our democracy by leading others to frustrate the bill, even at the cost of his own political career huh




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPytmuhYDAU&pp=0gcJCTMBo7VqN5tD
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by magoo10(m): 8:11am On Jan 30
seunmsg:
We are not there yet but we are surely on our way there. That’s why all Nigerians who want to see a better future for the country must rally round Mr. President to continue in office till 2027. We must stay the course so has to ensure this golden years are not derailed.
remove the word must there,if tinubu want Nigerians votes he should earn it rather than by coercion.
Remember he and buhari brought us where we are today despite campaigning to make Nigeria better than they met it so why must all Nigerians rally around him.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by anonimi: 8:12am On Jan 30
Obaofaba:
Poor man, how much do you have that people are calling to beg you for?

Unless you are being economical with the truth, things are getting better and the economy is stable.

Tinubu will win the next election because of his policies.
Do you mean his policies that have made life worse for Nigerians instead of the relief he promised huh

Deltafirstson:
Although the pump price of fuel was N197 when President Bola Tinubu took over on May 29, 2023, the product now sells for N617 per litre – less than two months after.

In his inaugural address, Tinubu announced that subsidy was gone, fulfilling a promise that all leading presidential candidates made during the campaign.

Nigerians have been lamenting the hardship occasioned by fuel price hike. Amid the lamentation, a video where Tinubu campaigned to slash the price of fuel went into circulation.

Checks by Daily Trust affirmed the authenticity of the video uploaded on the YouTube page of Channels Television.

At his campaign rally in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, on January 25, 2023, Tinubu spoke on a number of issues, but those of fuel scarcity and naira redesign made the headlines.

However, Tinubu who spoke in Yoruba language, also assured the crowd that though people were saying petrol price would hit N200, it would be reviewed downward under him.

“The great Nigerian youths, the great Nigerian students, the confident Nigerian youths. This is a revolution. This election is a revolution. They are plotting, but they will fail. They said fuel price will increase and reach N200 per litre. Go and relax, we will bring it down,” he had said in the 7th minute of the video.


https://dailytrust.com/breaking-video-of-tinubu-campaigning-to-crash-fuel-



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JH8CC_JdUA
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Eraddray(m): 8:13am On Jan 30
E be like say the economist no knw work again oo
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by happney65: 8:13am On Jan 30
seunmsg:
It’s a cautious word that signifies possibility of what can happen. Tinubu cannot realistically solve all of Nigerias problems in less than three years. They are simply telling you that the president is going in the right direction and if we stay the course, the golden years are about to come.

This is what should interest all Nigerians as we access the performance of Mr. President and make up our minds on who should lead us from 2027-2031. Recovering from the economic mess that Tinubu inherited in 2023 won’t be a sprint. It’s a long marathon that entails rigorous economic reforms and policies. All indices are now showing we are on course to full recovery and economic prosperity. It is left for us to ensure this is not derailed.
"Recovering from the economic mess that Tinubu inherited in 2023 won’t be a sprint"

Wasnt that what you people said in that Buhari's 8years? Followed him all about like a sheep claiming PDP has done this and that, yet now you want to blame Buhari and claim Tinubu meet an economic mess

Walahi e ni shey ori re.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by helinues: 8:14am On Jan 30
InvestSmart:
Hmmmm 🤔.

I guess you mean some Nigerians are feeling it (positively) like your self, while others are feeling heat like fire🤷🏽‍♀️
Did you miss the word productive?
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Gerrard59(m): 8:14am On Jan 30
seunmsg

The policies by Emi Lokan are good. But why did he support Buhari in 2015 and 2019, knowing fully well that Buhari has historically been incompetent at anything he does?
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by physics12: 8:15am On Jan 30
It's not stabilizing. We have gotten used to hardship. So any small drop in price makes us fill as if they is positive change.

Gas is 1150
Palm oil 1500 a bottle
Groundnut oil is 2500 a bottle.
Meat is still expensive

So while rice and beans have drop, the basic ingredients and stuff needed to cook it have not drop. So the relief from rice and beans is used to purchase other ingredients which have inturn cancel the supposed "relief"
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by ALTERNATEID: 8:16am On Jan 30
Well said by The Economist. They captured all the issues succinctly.
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Johnrake69: 8:18am On Jan 30
BlackPhanter:
As painful as it is for me to do, I have to admit that the economic reforms being done by Tinubu's government is yielding positive results. Especially with the stabilization of the naira again the USD . We can now use our naira cards to make international purchases. This among several other things.
One major thing that can move the country forward economically is to cure the festering disease of insecurity and corruption.
Wait ooo… Were Nigerians not using their Naira cards to shop on Amazon and EBay before the APC plague hit Nigeria in 2015? Pls I don’t know how old you’re but please note that Naira cards worked on foreign sites before APC came to power in 2015. We must not allow this lie to fester anymore

It’s funny reading through comments here. Aside from parroting dumb narrative about anti people’s policies they should tell us what they see that presents a bright future for Nigeria. Is it the 2026 budget that primarily comprise of purchase of vehicles, furniture and fittings, travels, consultancy and other wasteful expenditures?

Or where agriculture budget will be used to build palaces for traditional rulers and for a nation facing starvation where 1 in every five Nigerian is facing starvation. Only about 1.4% of the budget was allocated to agriculture and same budget will be spent on things that have nothing to do with food security.

I really sorry for Nigerians
Re: Nigeria’s Economy May Be Back From The Brink - The Economist by Lanruze: 8:22am On Jan 30
Dear Economist,

We know the $9m has touched you too.

Kindly be guided please in your story spinning articles.
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