The World Bank has approved a $500 million financing package for Nigeria to help mobilise private investment and expand access to and usage of inclusive, innovative financial products for Micro Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in the country.
In a press release, the Bank said that the funding, which is for the “Fostering Inclusive Finance for MSMEs in Nigeria (FINCLUDE) project,” comprises a $400 million International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) loan and a $100 million International Development Association (IDA) credit.
According to the statement, the operation will be implemented by the Development Bank of Nigeria (DBN), with credit guarantees delivered through DBN’s subsidiary, Impact Credit Guarantee Limited (ICGL).
The statement said: “Nigeria’s Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) form the backbone of the economy—accounting for most businesses, nearly half of GDP, and a large share of jobs—yet they face longstanding barriers to formal finance.
“Fewer than one in 20 MSMEs have access to bank credit; loans are often short‑term and costly; and collateral requirements exclude many viable firms. Women‑led enterprises, which make up a substantial portion of MSMEs, are disproportionately affected, facing higher rejection rates and limited tailored products.
“Agribusinesses, central to food security and rural livelihoods, similarly struggle to obtain longer‑tenor financing for equipment, processing, storage, and logistics.
“FINCLUDE addresses these constraints by expanding affordable, longer‑term finance and tailored solutions to segments with the greatest development impact,” the statement added. Commenting on the initiative, World Bank Country Director for Nigeria, Mathew Verghis, said: “FINCLUDE is about jobs, opportunity, and inclusion.
By opening finance for viable MSMEs—particularly women‑led firms and agribusinesses—Nigeria can accelerate growth and deliver tangible benefits in communities nationwide. “The project will make it easier for deserving small businesses to get the finance they need to grow and hire workers.
With better support for lenders that practice inclusive finance and fairer, longer‑term loans for entrepreneurs, we are backing the people who power Nigeria’s economy especially women and those in agriculture.”
In its statement, the Washington-based lender also stated that: “Through DBN, the operation will strengthen the capacity of banks, including microfinance banks and nonbank financial institutions such as Financial Technologies (FinTechs), to provide larger loans with more reasonable repayment periods, and through ICGL will scale partial credit guarantees so that lenders can extend credit to businesses they might otherwise consider too risky.”
“Targeted technical assistance will modernise loan appraisal with AI-enabled digital platform to speed decisions and use better data, strengthen impact measurement, and build capacity for both MSMEs and participating financial institutions.
A strong emphasis on inclusion will ensure women‑led businesses and agribusinesses benefit from these improvements,” it said.

