
By Olanrewaju Osho
Public policy rarely unfolds in clean chapters. More often, it evolves through cycles of expansion, distortion, correction, and recalibration. Nigeria’s economic management trajectory over the past decade and a half reflects such a cycle — one that offers important lessons for regulators, fiscal authorities, and institutional leaders.
Understanding the present reform environment requires a structural rather than partisan lens. Unfortunately, structural lenses are rare in moments of economic strain, while partisan narratives multiply. Public debate often gravitates toward political alignment instead of policy architecture. Yet meaningful evaluation of reform must focus on systems, incentives, and institutional coherence — not political loyalties.
REFORM CYCLE PHASE I: STRUCTURAL DRIFT AND DEFERRED ADJUSTMENT
During the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria benefited from relatively strong oil prices and recorded statistical expansion, including GDP rebasing that positioned the country as Africa’s largest economy at the time. However, underlying vulnerabilities remained. They were visible to the discerning, but hidden to those who only see above the surface.
The fiscal framework continued to depend heavily on hydrocarbon revenues. External reserves were exposed to commodity volatility. Structural diversification progressed slowly relative to the pace required for long-term resilience. Subsidy regimes and administrative pricing mechanisms remained embedded.
The challenge was not immediate collapse but deferred adjustment. When external buffers are not strengthened during periods of relative stability, future shocks become more destabilizing.
REFORM CYCLE PHASE II: POLICY RIGIDITY AMID MOUNTING PRESSURES
The administration of President Muhammadu Buhari entered office with a mandate centered on anti-corruption, fiscal discipline, and economic stabilization. However, the policy mix adopted during this period introduced additional complexities.
Exchange rate management evolved into a multi-window system, creating segmentation within the foreign exchange market. Fuel subsidies persisted and, in some periods, expanded in fiscal weight. Public borrowing increased significantly, partly in response to revenue shortfalls and external shocks, including the global oil price downturn and the COVID-19 pandemic.
While these policies were often framed as protective measures to shield consumers and maintain price stability, they generated distortions that constrained investor confidence, complicated regulatory oversight, and expanded fiscal exposure.
By the end of the period, inflationary pressures, exchange rate disparities, and debt service burdens had become defining features of the macroeconomic landscape.
REFORM CYCLE PHASE III: RAPID REALIGNMENT AND SHOCK THERAPY
Upon assumption of office, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu initiated rapid structural adjustments. Two decisions were particularly consequential:
Removal of fuel subsidy
Unification of foreign exchange windows
From a regulatory and fiscal standpoint, these actions represented an effort to dismantle entrenched distortions and restore market signaling mechanisms.
Subsidy removal addressed long-standing concerns about fiscal leakages, regressive benefit distribution, and budgetary opacity. Exchange rate unification sought to improve transparency, enhance capital inflows, and reduce arbitrage opportunities within the currency market.
Structural correction carries transitional costs. Most times, the costs could prove huge and unbearable.
THE ADJUSTMENT PARADOX: MACRO SIGNALS VS. MICRO REALITY
Nigeria’s current reform environment illustrates what may be termed the “adjustment paradox.” Macro-level indicators may show early signs of stabilization — improved revenue clarity, exchange rate convergence, recalibrated fiscal planning — while microeconomic conditions remain strained.
Household purchasing power has been pressured by higher fuel and food prices. Input costs for small and medium enterprises have increased. Real income adjustments lag policy reform.
This divergence is not unusual in structural reform cycles. Market corrections tend to affect price levels immediately, while productivity gains, investment expansion, and supply-side responses materialize more gradually.
For regulators and policymakers, this creates a credibility challenge: sustaining reform momentum while citizens experience short-term hardship.
INSTITUTIONAL LESSONS FOR REGULATORS
Several lessons emerge from Nigeria’s recent policy cycle:
DEFERRED REFORM MAGNIFIES FUTURE COSTS
Postponing structural adjustment may provide temporary relief but compounds distortions over time.
POLICY COHERENCE IS CRITICAL
Exchange rate management, fiscal policy, subsidy regimes, and monetary frameworks must operate within a coordinated architecture to avoid unintended spillovers.
TRANSPARENCY STRENGTHENS LEGITIMACY
Clear communication of reform objectives, timelines, and expected outcomes enhances institutional trust.
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION MUST TRANSLATE TO INCLUSION
Structural reforms must ultimately expand productive capacity, improve employment generation, and enhance food and energy security.
THE PATH FORWARD: FROM STABILIZATION TO INCLUSIVE GROWTH
Nigeria appears to be transitioning from a phase of distortion management to one of structural recalibration. The durability of current reforms will depend on:
Sustained fiscal discipline
Strengthened revenue mobilization
Expansion of domestic production capacity
Social protection mechanisms targeted at vulnerable populations
Regulatory consistency that supports private sector investment
Reform credibility is built not only on bold announcements but on institutional consistency over time. Every key player involved in the management of the economy is required to commit to helping to strengthen and intensify institutional consistency.
THE RECAP.
Nigeria’s economic trajectory across the administrations of Goodluck Jonathan, Muhammadu Buhari, and Bola Ahmed Tinubu illustrates three enduring principles of governance.
First, structural weaknesses that remain unresolved during periods of relative stability tend to intensify under stress. Second, corrective action delayed often becomes more disruptive when it is eventually undertaken. Third, reform — particularly structural reform — is rarely painless, especially when it seeks to dismantle long-standing distortions.
For many Nigerians, the adjustment phase has been severe. Inflationary pressures, cost-of-living increases, and constrained purchasing power have translated macroeconomic realignment into daily hardship. While emerging indicators may suggest gradual stabilization, public sentiment understandably reflects lived economic realities rather than policy intent.
Reform periods often resemble medical intervention: the procedure may be necessary, the recovery uncomfortable, and the benefits incremental rather than immediate. Public appreciation typically follows tangible recovery, not the announcement of treatment.
For regulators, policymakers, and institutional leaders, the imperative now is clear. Structural realignment must transition into durable stabilization and inclusive growth. Fiscal consolidation must be matched by productivity expansion. Exchange rate normalization must be reinforced by investment confidence. Revenue reform must translate into visible public value.
National reform is not an event; it is a disciplined continuum requiring coherence, transparency, institutional coordination, and sustained political will. Governments that undertake deep correction during difficult cycles should not expect immediate popularity. Structural reform rarely aligns with short-term political incentives.
The ultimate test will not be whether difficult decisions were initiated, but whether they are sustained with consistency long enough to produce measurable improvements in productivity, macroeconomic stability, and citizen welfare.
History’s judgment will rest not on the turbulence of transition, but on the durability of outcomes.
Olanrewaju Osho is
the Publisher of –The Regulators @ the regulators.com.ng
