Economy

A Recovery Only On Paper: Nigeria’s Economic Mirage -By Isaac Asabor

At present, that measure is falling short. Macro-level indicators may suggest recovery, but the lived reality for the majority of Nigerians is one of rising costs, stagnant wages, and persistent insecurity. Until growth becomes genuinely inclusive, the country’s so-called economic progress will remain a mirage: visible on paper, but absent in the daily lives of its people.

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On paper, Nigeria’s economy seems to be on the mend. Headline statistics point to progress: GDP growth is inching upward, oil production is stabilizing, and foreign exchange rates are showing less volatility. International institutions, including the World Bank and IMF, are cautiously optimistic, suggesting that the country’s hard-won reforms are starting to yield results.

But for ordinary Nigerians, the reality feels starkly different. The benefits of these macroeconomic gains are not translating into improvements in daily life. Prices remain high, jobs are scarce, and household incomes struggle to keep pace with the rising cost of living. This gap between macroeconomic indicators and microeconomic realities is the central paradox of Nigeria’s current economic situation: a recovery exists only on paper.

Nigeria’s GDP growth is projected to rise from 3.5% in 2024 to 3.9% in 2025 and 4.2% in 2026. At first glance, these figures suggest steady progress. But a closer look at which sectors are driving growth paints a less encouraging picture.

Oil, financial services, and information and communication technology (ICT) dominate expansion. These industries generate significant revenue and are critical to national accounts, but they employ a tiny fraction of Nigeria’s workforce. Growth concentrated in capital-intensive sectors means that many Nigerians, especially those in manufacturing and agriculture, see little benefit.

This phenomenon, known as “jobless growth,” is particularly concerning in a country with a young and rapidly expanding population. Economic expansion without proportional job creation leaves millions of people in a state of financial stagnation, even as national statistics appear positive.

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While jobless growth explains why wages remain stagnant, high inflation ensures that the money people do earn buys less than before. Despite projections for inflation to moderate in the coming years, its persistent high levels have already inflicted real hardship on households.

Recent economic reforms, including the removal of fuel subsidies and unification of the foreign exchange market, have triggered a “cost pass-through” effect. Higher input costs for energy, transportation, and imported goods translate directly into higher consumer prices. Food, fuel, and essential commodities have all become more expensive, disproportionately affecting the poor.

For many Nigerians, this has created a harsh reality: earning more does not equate to living better. Families are forced to make difficult trade-offs, such as cutting back on meals, education, healthcare, or even small business investments. Inflation is not just a number; it is a daily squeeze that undermines quality of life.

Economic reforms are rarely painless, and Nigeria’s recent policy shifts are no exception. While the elimination of fuel subsidies and exchange rate unification aim to restore fiscal sustainability and attract investment, the immediate effect has been sharply higher prices for basic goods and services.

This short-term pain is exacerbated by a lack of adequate social safety nets. Many households bear the brunt of reforms without support, leading to an intensification of poverty and inequality. The promised benefits of these reforms, greater macroeconomic stability, higher investor confidence, and sustainable growth, are largely invisible to those struggling to pay their bills.

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Even without reform-induced shocks, Nigeria faces deep structural issues that prevent economic gains from reaching ordinary citizens. Agricultural productivity, a key source of employment, is hampered by insecurity in farming regions. Farmers face threats that reduce output, drive up food prices, and perpetuate poverty.

Infrastructure deficiencies further stifle inclusive growth. Poor roads, unreliable electricity, and inadequate storage and processing facilities make it expensive and difficult for small and medium-sized enterprises to thrive. These structural challenges ensure that labor-intensive sectors such as agriculture and manufacturing lag far behind capital-heavy industries like oil and finance, widening the gap between macro-level indicators and the lived experience of citizens.

The consequences of these dynamics are visible in Nigeria’s poverty and income statistics. Recent estimates suggest that poverty has surged, pushing more than 63% of the population below the poverty line, a dramatic increase from roughly 40% prior to the reforms. Meanwhile, wage growth has failed to keep pace with inflation, effectively eroding real incomes.

This dual pressure, higher costs and stagnant wages, creates a scenario in which even employed individuals struggle to maintain a decent standard of living. The economic recovery touted in policy circles has yet to materialize in households across the country.

While the picture is bleak, some glimmers of hope exist. Early 2025–2026 data show tentative improvements in agricultural output, which could help moderate food inflation over time. International financial institutions remain cautiously optimistic that as macroeconomic stability strengthens, benefits will eventually trickle down to households.

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However, projections indicate that poverty may continue to rise in the short term, potentially reaching over 53% in 2026 before any meaningful decline occurs. The road from macro-level stability to micro-level relief is likely to be long and uneven, with millions of Nigerians bearing the cost of adjustment along the way.

If Nigeria’s economic gains are to be more than just statistics, policymakers must prioritize inclusive growth. This requires investments in labor-intensive sectors such as manufacturing and agribusiness, which have the potential to create large-scale employment and generate income across the population.

Social safety nets, targeted subsidies, and cash transfers can help buffer households from the short-term shocks of reform. Without these mechanisms, the pain of necessary policy changes will continue to fall disproportionately on the most vulnerable.

Structural issues, too, demand attention. Improving security in agricultural regions, modernizing infrastructure, and supporting small and medium-sized enterprises are essential steps to unlock the country’s full economic potential. Equally important is aligning wage policies with inflation to ensure that income growth translates into actual improvements in living standards.

Nigeria’s current economic trajectory illustrates a fundamental lesson: GDP growth and exchange rate stability are not ends in themselves. The true measure of economic success is the well-being of citizens, the ability to afford food, access education and healthcare, and live with a sense of security.

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At present, that measure is falling short. Macro-level indicators may suggest recovery, but the lived reality for the majority of Nigerians is one of rising costs, stagnant wages, and persistent insecurity. Until growth becomes genuinely inclusive, the country’s so-called economic progress will remain a mirage: visible on paper, but absent in the daily lives of its people.

Nigeria’s challenge is clear: transform statistical growth into tangible relief for citizens. Anything less risks perpetuating the illusion of recovery, leaving millions of Nigerians to navigate an economy that grows around them, but not for them.

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