Latest news

PwC Projects 4.3% Nigeria GDP Expansion for 2026


PwC Nigeria has projected that Nigeria’s real Gross Domestic Product growth in 2026 would settle around 4.3 per cent.

This was disclosed in a statement shared with The PUNCH on Wednesday following the release of its 2026 Economic Outlook.

This projection broadly aligns with that of the World Bank, which, in its latest Africa’s Pulse report, anticipates that Nigeria’s economic growth will strengthen to 4.4 per cent between 2026 and 2027, driven by higher activity in ICT, finance, and real estate.

“Looking ahead, the outlook projects real GDP growth of about 4.3 per cent in 2026, with inflation moderating gradually and the naira remaining broadly stable. Fiscal constraints persist, reinforcing the importance of capital efficiency and balance-sheet discipline.

“Against this backdrop, PwC Nigeria highlights practical imperatives for business leaders in 2026: making selective investment bets in attractive sectors and regions, scenario-planning for macroeconomic and geopolitical shocks, adapting business models and cost structures for resilience, accelerating digital transformation and responsible AI adoption, and strengthening regulatory and tax compliance as reforms move from design to execution,” the statement read.

Also, PwC Nigeria’s 2026 Economic Outlook asserted that recent gains in macroeconomic stability are reshaping the operating environment for businesses, investors, and markets.

The report indicated that Nigeria recorded improvements in macroeconomic stability in 2025 following key monetary and foreign-exchange reforms, with inflation easing, exchange-rate conditions stabilising, and external reserves strengthening. PwC’s Economic Outlook 2026 highlighted how this stability is influencing strategic business choices in 2026, particularly around investment, cost and funding decisions, and regulatory, tax, and digital priorities.

Commenting on the report, the Country Senior Partner, PwC Nigeria, Sam Abu, said, “PwC Nigeria’s Economic Outlook 2026 provides forward-looking analysis of key macroeconomic indicators and what they signal for the economy and for business leaders. Nigeria has achieved improved macroeconomic stability over the past year. The focus now is on how that stability is translated into sustainable economic growth and how businesses position themselves for 2026. For companies, this stability provides a more predictable operating environment for planning, investment, and growth decisions.”

The Economic Outlook 2026 also identified seven key issues shaping Nigeria’s economic performance in the year ahead, spanning global and domestic forces. These include monetary policy effectiveness, fiscal sustainability and reform execution, global economic and geopolitical dynamics, domestic security and social pressures, uneven sectoral growth, consumer affordability constraints, and the expanding role of the digital economy and artificial intelligence.

Speaking on the outlook, Partner and Chief Economist, PwC Nigeria, Olusegun Zaccheaus said, “The seven themes in the Outlook show how global and domestic forces will shape economic performance in 2026. Globally, growth is projected at around 3.1%, while merchandise trade growth slows to about 0.5 per cent, keeping oil prices, capital flows, and access to foreign inflows as key channels influencing Nigeria’s growth and FX liquidity.

“Domestically, improved monetary effectiveness has reduced volatility and clarified pricing, cost, and funding signals, even as fiscal pressures, security challenges, and weak household purchasing power continue to shape sector outcomes. Growth is more likely to remain concentrated in services and selected capital-intensive sectors, placing a premium on disciplined capital allocation and sector selection.”

Tags :

Related Posts

Must Read

Popular Posts

The Battle for Africa

Rivals old and new are bracing themselves for another standoff on the African continent. By Vadim Samodurov The attack by Tuareg militants and al-Qaeda-affiliated JNIM group (Jama’a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin) against Mali’s military and Russia’s forces deployed in the country that happened on July 27, 2024 once again turned the spotlight on the activities...

I apologise for saying no heaven without tithe – Adeboye

The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has apologised for saying that Christians who don’t pay tithe might not make it to heaven. Adeboye who had previously said that paying tithe was one of the prerequisites for going to heaven, apologised for the comment while addressing his congregation Thursday...

Protesters storm Rivers electoral commission, insist election must hold

Angry protesters on Friday stormed the office of the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission, singing and chanting ‘Election must hold’. They defied the heavy rainfall spreading canopies, while singing and drumming, with one side of the road blocked. The protest came after the Rivers State governor stormed the RSIEC in the early hours of Friday...

Man who asked Tinubu to resign admitted in psychiatric hospital

The Adamawa State Police Command has disclosed that the 30-year-old Abdullahi Mohammed who climbed a 33 kv high tension electricity pole in Mayo-Belwa last Friday has been admitted at the Yola Psychiatric hospital for mental examination. The Police Public Relations Officer of the command SP Suleiman Nguroje, told Arewa PUNCH on Friday in an exclusive...