Tag: manufacturing Nigeria

  • High Interest Rates Stifle Private Sector Lending to Five-Year Low

    High Interest Rates Stifle Private Sector Lending to Five-Year Low

    Figures cited by The Guardian show that the Central Bank of Nigeria’s aggressive monetary tightening has successfully reined in inflation but at a heavy cost to business expansion. Lending growth to the private sector has plummeted to its lowest level since 2020, as deposit money banks become increasingly wary of high-risk loans in a high-interest-rate environment. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are bearing the brunt of the credit crunch.

    Data from the apex bank indicates that credit growth fell sharply to under 1% in the last quarter, a stark contrast to the double-digit growth seen in previous years. While the CBN maintains that high rates are necessary to stabilize the Naira, business groups warn that the lack of affordable credit is forcing many local manufacturers to scale down operations or halt expansion plans entirely.

    Vanguard and The Nation also reported on the credit slowdown. Vanguard highlighted that “banks are prioritizing government securities over private loans,” while The Nation quoted a Lagos Chamber of Commerce official who said, “At 30% plus interest, no legitimate business can survive a bank loan in this climate.”

    Echotitbits take: The CBN is in a “catch-22” situation—keep rates high to fight inflation and protect the Naira, or lower them to save the real sector. Expect the pressure on the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to mount as manufacturers begin to report shrinking margins in their Q1 results.

    Source: BusinessDay – https://businessday.ng/business-economy/article/high-interest-rates-push-lending-growth-to-five-year-low/, February 3, 2026

    Photo credit: BusinessDay

  • CPPE: 2026 stability hinges on sustaining reforms, but manufacturing remains fragile without cost relief

    CPPE: 2026 stability hinges on sustaining reforms, but manufacturing remains fragile without cost relief

    2026-01-02 09:00:00
    In an analysis published by The Guardian, the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) projects Nigeria could see greater stability and growth in 2026 if reforms are sustained, but cautions that manufacturing remains fragile under persistent structural constraints.

    The analysis highlights how energy, logistics and financing costs continue to weigh on factories, arguing that macro stability alone won’t lift the real sector without targeted execution that reduces operating costs.

    CPPE’s framing is that reform continuity must translate into measurable improvements in business conditions, otherwise growth remains narrow and disconnected from jobs and purchasing power.

    Validation: Vanguard echoed the execution theme, reporting that gains hinge on “effective execution” of incentives and enabling measures. AllAfrica reinforced CPPE’s structural-risk warning and quoted: “Nigeria’s manufacturing revival hinges on managing structural risks…”

    Echotitbits take: Reforms must translate into lower production costs. Watch early-2026 signals—grid stability versus self-generation expense, FX predictability for inputs and whether tax changes simplify compliance rather than create new leak points.

    Source: The Guardian — 2025-12-29 (https://guardian.ng/business-services/cppe-projects-stability-growth-in-2026-with-sustained-reforms/)
    The Guardian 2025-12-29

    Photo Credit: The Guardian