The Alarming Numbers
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SME default index plunged from 0.5 to -7.2 (Q2 2025)
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Household loan defaults dropped from 3.9 to -7.0
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MPR held at 27.5% for third straight meeting
Why This Is Happening
Nigeria’s aggressive monetary tightening, aimed at taming inflation (still at 28.6%), is now squeezing small businesses:
Higher borrowing costs – Loans become unaffordable
Thin profit margins – SMEs struggle with cash flow
Delayed economic relief – Reforms yet to trickle down
“The real economy is suffocating,” warns Bismarck Rewane, CEO of Financial Derivatives Company.
The World Bank’s Take
Despite the strain, the World Bank backs Nigeria’s reforms, praising:
FX liberalization
Fuel subsidy removal
Private sector focus
“Nigeria is Africa’s cornerstone. Bold reforms will pay off—but SMEs need breathing room,” says Ms. Kant, World Bank delegation lead.
The Bigger Challenge
FPI inflows hit $8.05B (Q1 2025) – But it’s hot money, not long-term investment
$1T economy goal requires industrial capital, not just speculative flows
What’s Next?
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CBN’s dilemma: Keep rates high to fight inflation OR ease pressure on SMEs?
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SME rescue plans: Will the govt introduce targeted relief measures?
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World Bank’s role: Can its energy/digital/youth employment support offset the pain?
Key Takeaways
SMEs are Nigeria’s biggest employers—but also the most vulnerable
Reforms are necessary, but execution must protect small businesses
Nigeria needs FDI, not just hot money, to hit $1T GDP