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IMF Ups Nigeria’s Growth Forecast to 4.4% in 2026, Cited Reform

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has revised Nigeria’s economic growth forecast upward to 4.4% in 2026, citing improved macroeconomic conditions and reform momentum.

This represents a 0.2 percentage point increase from the Fund’s October 2025 projection.

Nigeria’s economic growth is projected to slow down to 4.1% in 2027, according to the IMF’s January 2026 World Economic Outlook.

The Fund attributes this improved outlook to a combination of strong technology investment, supportive fiscal and monetary policies, and the resilience of the private sector.

Globally, the IMF expects a 3.3% growth rate this year, with a slight slowdown to 3.2% in 2027.

Meanwhile, sub-Saharan Africa’s economy is projected to expand by 4.4% in 2026, driven by macroeconomic stabilization and reform efforts in key economies.

The revised forecast is a welcome development, especially as Nigeria continues to navigate global economic uncertainties.

The World Bank has also increased its projection for Nigeria’s economic growth rate for 2026 to 4.4%, up from 3.7% forecasted in June 2025.

Persecondnews reports that Nigeria’s private sector has been the engine of economic growth, contributing over 96% to real GDP in 2025.

The non-oil sector, driven by agriculture, finance, trade, and manufacturing, has been the main growth driver.

The Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) remained above the 50-point expansion threshold, signaling continuous economic activity.

Credit to the private sector reached a high of N117.783 trillion by September 2025, a 75.9% increase over two years.

The private sector accounts for about 90% of Nigeria’s GDP, with the government focusing on enabling rather than competing with it.

This has fostered an environment for expansion, with forecasts indicating sustained growth into 2026.

See also  Nigeria's IMF Debt Cleared, Burden Lifted, Signals Economic Revival

The non-oil sector’s share of total economic activity climbed to 96.56%, reinforcing its role as the backbone of the economy.

Growth in the non-oil sector improved to 3.91%, supported by agriculture, ICT, real estate, financial institutions, trade, and manufacturing.

However, the oil sector growth dropped sharply, expanding by only 5.84% in Q3 2025 compared to a strong 20.46% in Q2.

Average crude oil production fell from 1.68mbpd to 1.64mbpd, reducing oil’s share of GDP to 3.44%.

With new tax reforms expected to begin in 2026, the sustained strength of the non-oil sector presents an opportunity for improved revenue mobilisation.

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