Cardoso Unveils Nigeria’s Economic Rebirth Blueprint

Cardoso Unveils Nigeria’s Economic Rebirth Blueprint


…Says Nation Has Moved From Crisis To Confidence

LAGOS – Nigeria’s economic recovery entered a new chapter on Fri­day night as Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Gov­ernor Olayemi Cardoso deliv­ered a sweeping and assertive address at the Chartered In­stitute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) Annual Bankers’ Din­ner, declaring that the country has “moved firmly from crisis management to rebuilding confidence, stability, and glob­al credibility.”Speaking before industry leaders in Lagos, Car­doso outlined a reform-driven turnaround that he said has shifted Nigeria from the brink of macroeconomic collapse to one of the strongest trajec­tories among African econo­mies. Blending candour with data-rich analysis, the CBN Governor warned that recov­ery remains fragile but insisted that the results recorded over the last 12 months mark “a deci­sive break from the instability we inherited.”

Nigeria’s Deep Crisis: “We Did Not Arrive At This Point By Accident”

Cardoso began by situating recent progress within the scale of the challenges inher­ited. When the current lead­ership took office, he recalled, Nigeria’s economy was facing severe structural distortions:

Inflation is at a 28-year high of 34.6%.A paralysed forex market with over US$7 billion in unmet obligations. A 60% gap between official and paral­lel exchange rates. External re­serves are at precarious levels. Businesses are unable to plan due to violent price swings. Bro­ken monetary policy credibil­ity after years of unorthodox financing.

“This was not a Nigeria standing at the edge of a prec­ipice,” he said. “It had already gone over the cliff.”

Cardoso stressed that the nation’s recovery cannot be understood without acknowl­edging this starting point.

Inflation Falls Sharply, CBN Targets Single Digits

One of the most significant indicators of change, the Gov­ernor said, is inflation. The CBN’s return to data-driven, orthodox monetary policy has produced seven consecutive months of disinflation.

Inflation fell from 34.6% in November 2024 to 16.05% in October 2025.

Food inflation dropped from 21.87% in August to 13.12% in October.

“We will not rest until price stability is firmly secured. Double-digit inflation is unac­ceptable,” Cardoso declared, promising continued tighten­ing and a full transition to in­flation-targeting.

FX Market Reforms: From Paralysis To Stability

The CBN Governor high­lighted the foreign exchange market as the clearest symbol of renewed investor confi­dence:

FX backlog of over US$7 billion fully cleared. Ex­change-rate windows unified.

Gap between official and parallel market rates reduced from 60% to under 2%.

Capital inflows surged to US$20.98 billion in the first 10 months of 2025 — a 428% jump compared to 2023.

The deployment of EFEMS, powered by Bloomberg BMatch, and the Nigerian FX Code, he said, has introduced unprecedented transparency and orderliness.

“Opacity is giving way to discipline,” Cardoso said. “Price discovery is now real.”

Reserves Rebound To Sev­en-Year High

Nigeria’s external sector has undergone a dramatic strengthening:

Current account surplus rose to US$5.28 billion in Q2 2025.

Foreign reserves climbed to US$46.7 billion by mid-Novem­ber — the highest in nearly seven years.

Diaspora remittances grew by 12% in 2025.

Non-oil exports expanded by more than 18%.

Crucially, Cardoso noted, “reserves are being rebuilt organically, not through bor­rowing.”

Rating Upgrades, Eurobond Success Boost Global Credibil­ity

The Governor pointed to renewed international confi­dence: Fitch upgraded Nigeria from B- to B (stable).

Moody’s raised its rating from Caa1 to B3.

S&P revised Nigeria’s out­look to positive.

“These decisions reflect in­creasing reform credibility,” he said.

Nigeria’s US$2.35 billion Eurobond issuance, which at­tracted US$13 billion in orders — a record for the country — was cited as a powerful signal that markets are responding positively.

Banking Sector: Recapi­talisation On Track, Stability Strengthened

Cardoso delivered an update on the banking recapitalisation programme scheduled to con­clude on March 31, 2026:

27 banks have raised capi­tal through public offers and rights issues.

16 banks have already met or exceeded the new capital re­quirements.

Stress-test results for 2025, he noted, show that the bank­ing system remains fundamen­tally sound.

The CBN has also tightened discipline across cash distri­bution channels, ATM deploy­ment, and POS operations, after a full internal review of the cash lifecycle.

Digital Finance: Nigeria Consolidates Its Lead In Africa

Nigeria’s fintech and dig­ital payments ecosystem has strengthened further:

12 million contactless cards in circulation.

Over 40 fintech innovators are active in the CBN’s sand­box.

Leading fintech apps sur­passed 10 million downloads each, with one exceeding 50 million.

You Might Be Interested In





Source: Independent

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *