The International Monetary Fund has issued a stark warning. Nigerians should brace for even tougher economic conditions. Food and transportation costs are rising. Household incomes are being squeezed. Global shocks are lingering. And the country’s debt burden is climbing.
But the IMF’s prediction is not merely a forecast. It is an indictment of a government that has repeatedly failed to convert opportunity into stability.
At a press conference during the Spring Meetings of the World Bank and IMF in Washington, D.C., the Fund’s Director of the African Department made clear that the impact of the Middle East crisis is already being felt across Sub-Saharan Africa — and Nigeria is at the epicenter of the pain. Transportation costs have surged. Food security is under threat. Fertilizer is either unavailable or unaffordable. Urban households are feeling the pinch. Rural areas are suffering even more.
The IMF’s assessment is blunt: life is already difficult for Nigerians. And the policies of the current administration have done little to soften the blow.

The Oil Paradox: A Windfall Mismanaged
Here is the contradiction at the heart of Nigeria’s economic crisis. Nigerian crude grades are trading above $113 per barrel — more than $53 above the $60 benchmark in the 2026 Budget. Brass River and Qua Iboe are selling at $113.82 and $113.72, respectively. Prices have climbed sharply amid geopolitical tensions. Analysts agree that Nigeria could earn significant oil revenue from the conflict as long as hostilities persist.
Yet the government shows no evidence of a coherent strategy to deploy this windfall. Instead of using the revenue surge to build fiscal buffers, reduce debt, or invest in productive infrastructure, the administration appears content to let the moment pass. There is no visible plan to channel the windfall toward deficit reduction, social spending, or capital goods production. There is no credible commitment to addressing the pipeline infrastructure challenges and operational losses that have historically caused the oil sector to underperform its quotas.
The government will collect more money. Ordinary Nigerians will pay more for fuel, transportation, and food. That is not prudent management. That is a policy failure by design.
The Debt Trap
The IMF projects that Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio will rise to 33.1 percent by 2027 — a modest downward revision from 35.3 percent, but still higher than the 32.3 percent projected for 2026. Total public debt reached N159.27 trillion at the end of the fourth quarter of 2025, up from N153.29 trillion in the previous quarter.
A 33.1 percent debt-to-GDP ratio is not, on its face, a crisis. By global standards, it is manageable. But the ratio is misleading. Nigeria’s GDP is significantly buoyed by an informal economy that contributes almost nothing to government revenue. Debt serviceability depends on a narrow formal tax base. The government can borrow. The question is whether it can pay back.
The IMF’s Fiscal Affairs Director warned that the crisis requires emergency support, but the ability to respond depends on pre-existing fiscal space. Too often, the needed consolidation is postponed. That is a direct critique of governments that delay hard decisions. Nigeria’s administration has shown no appetite for those hard decisions. Subsidies remain politically untouchable even when they are fiscally costly, regressive, and difficult to unwind.
The government is not preparing for the next shock. It is hoped the current shock does not get worse.
Reform Momentum or Performative Action?
The IMF’s African Department Director noted that steps have been taken to stabilize debt and reduce fiscal deficits. That stabilization, he argued, helps when another shock arrives because there is a little more scope to defray the cost. But he also pleaded that interventions remain consistent with medium-term objectives and that countries not be thrown off course by the crisis.
The Nigerian government has a long history of abandoning reforms when pressure mounts. The administration speaks of fiscal discipline while seeking $6 billion in additional external borrowing. It claims to prioritize spending while recurrent expenditure swallows the bulk of the budget. It praises its Debt Management Office while debt service consumes a growing share of revenue.
The IMF’s warning is clear: abandoning reforms would be a double whammy for countries already under strain. The Nigerian government appears not to have heard the message.
The 2027 Distraction
The IMF’s 2027 timeline is not accidental. It coincides with a general election. In Nigeria, election years historically test fiscal discipline — and the country has consistently failed that test. Incumbent governments spend heavily to secure re-election. Fiscal prudence takes a backseat to political survival.
There is no evidence that the current administration will behave differently. The same government that has struggled to articulate a coherent economic policy will soon be consumed by the machinery of re-election. The windfall from high oil prices, instead of being invested in structural transformation, will likely be deployed for political patronage.
The IMF can project debt-to-GDP ratios. It cannot project political behavior. That is the variable that should worry Nigerians most.
The Bottom Line
The IMF has dropped its prediction: tougher times ahead for Nigerians. Rising costs. A climbing debt burden. A global environment of heightened risk. But the Fund’s warning is not just about external shocks. It is about internal failure.
Nigeria is earning $113 per barrel of crude — $53 above the budget benchmark. The government has a historic opportunity to build buffers, reduce debt, and invest in productive capacity. There is no evidence that it will. Instead, the windfall will likely be consumed by debt service, recurrent expenditure, and election-year politics.
The IMF says life is already difficult for Nigerians. The government says it is managing the crisis. The gap between those two statements is the story. And it is Nigerians who will pay the price.





