Nigeria’s 26.5% Policy Rate Makes $1trn GDP Target Political Talk
Nigerian companies and individuals with access to personal leverage will continue to pay high interest rates on borrowing funds as the Central Bank keeps the benchmark interest rate.
The CBN faces a structural contradiction and will likely remain in a rate-cut trap. To support economic growth, it needs to continue cutting rates, Coronation Merchant Bank Limited said in a research note.
But foreign portfolio investment (FPI) inflows that boosted Nigeria’s external reserve accumulation are explicitly attracted by high rates.
“Cutting too aggressively risks triggering the outflows that would erode the very reserves being used as evidence of macroeconomic progress”, the report said.
Amid a $1 trillion gross domestic product (GDP) target, Nigeria’s monetary authority left the interest rate benchmark unchanged at 26.5% last week.
The monetary policy that shows a preference for FX inflows from foreign investors while local businesses continue to scale back operations makes the 13-digit economy balance sheet target another political statement.
Nigeria lost its position as the largest country in Africa due to misaligned economic policies that failed to drive private-sector growth. The authority anticipates achieving a $1 trillion GDP, claiming to do so by 2030, suggesting a lack of a structural plan or an economic overhaul.
A series of past policies, including the removal of petrol subsidies, effectively transferred wealth to the government and left companies high and dry amid double-digit inflation.
The latest development in the market indicates corporate bellwethers with alternatives are raising short-term funds to boost working capital with commercial papers.
The trend, according to financial experts, is to reduce borrowing costs that weigh heavily on companies’ financials and dent profitability due to high operating expenses.
The immediate effects of high operating costs for manufacturers and service providers have been felt in the prices of goods and services.
With high pump prices of fuels and housing, Nigerian workers continue to demand a raise, while the government sets a minimum wage at N70,000, a take-home that cannot take anyone home.
High business operating costs have been forcing the private sector to scale back, thereby affecting economic growth in Africa’s most populous nation.
Last week, the Central Bank maintained a cautious, tight monetary stance aimed at curbing persistent inflationary pressures, despite a recent moderation to 15.69%, amid improving exchange rate stability and sustained foreign portfolio inflows.
The decisions of the monetary policy committee (MPC) were anchored on a comprehensive assessment of risks to the macroeconomic outlook. The monetary authority expects Nigeria’s economic activity to remain resilient through 2026 despite downside risks associated with the Middle East conflict.
The country’s inflation rate has risen for two consecutive months, largely induced by external shocks. The CBN committee recognised the transitory nature of the uptick and remained confident that the current macroeconomic environment remains sufficiently resilient to support a gradual return to the disinflationary path.
This decision marks a pause following the 50-basis-point easing implemented at the previous meeting in February. In line with broad market expectations, the MPC opted to retain the MPR at 26.50% and all other policy parameters unchanged.
“This outcome aligns with our expectations for a hold, premised on renewed inflationary pressures stemming from higher domestic energy costs linked to spillover effects from ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East”, Cowry Asset Management Limited said in a commentary note.
Nigeria’s headline inflation sustained its upward reversal for the second consecutive month in April 2026, rising to 15.69% year-on-year from 15.38% recorded in March, representing a 31 basis points increase.
This development signals a temporary interruption of the previously recorded eleven-month disinflation trend. The renewed inflationary pressure was primarily driven by cost-push factors.
Chief among these was the surge in global crude oil prices following disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz in early March, which affected global supply chains and elevated international energy prices.
The resulting increase in domestic fuel prices led to higher transportation and production costs across major sectors of the economy. Against this backdrop, the Committee considered emerging upside risks to inflation, alongside heightened global uncertainty, sufficient to justify maintaining a cautious monetary policy stance.
In reaching its decision, the MPC reviewed global macroeconomic conditions and noted that global growth is expected to moderate in 2026, reflecting the combined effects of persistent geopolitical tensions and prolonged tight monetary conditions across advanced and emerging economies.
The Committee further observed that prevailing global oil price shocks could sustain upward pressure on global inflation in the near term, likely prompting major central banks to remain cautious in their monetary policy trajectories.
On the domestic front, the MPC acknowledged that Nigeria’s growth outlook remains relatively resilient despite external vulnerabilities, supported by improved macroeconomic conditions.
The monetary authority maintained that the cumulative effects of previous monetary tightening measures, improved foreign exchange market liquidity, and easing food supply constraints are expected to reinforce the medium-term disinflation process. NGX Dips by N366bn as Investors Paint Broad Street in Red










