The International Monetary Fund projects that Nigeria could become Africa’s third-largest economy in 2026, with GDP rising to about $334 billion and overtaking Algeria. Both the IMF and the World Bank revised Nigeria’s 2026 growth forecast up to 4.4% (from 3.7% in mid-2025), crediting higher oil output, improved FX liquidity and ongoing macroeconomic reforms.
The Numbers
- Projected GDP: ~$334bn in 2026
- Ranking: Africa’s 3rd-largest economy, overtaking Algeria
- Growth: revised up to 4.4% (IMF + World Bank)
The Drivers
- Increased oil production
- Improved foreign-exchange liquidity
- Fuel-subsidy removal + exchange-rate liberalisation
- Fiscal adjustments under President Tinubu’s reform programme
Why It Matters
- Signals a turnaround after painful reform-driven adjustment
- Reshapes Africa’s economic-power rankings
- Could lift West African trade + investment flows
- Watched closely across ECOWAS, including Ghana
What To Watch
- Whether reforms translate into household relief on inflation
- Naira stability and FX reserves
- Oil-output sustainability and diversification
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