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AfDB flags weak private sector credit in Nigeria

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The African Development Bank has said banks in Nigeria lend the equivalent of just 9.4 per cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product to the private sector, reflecting the limited role of the financial system in supporting business growth and economic development.

The bank disclosed this in its African Economic Outlook 2026 report, which noted that Nigeria ranked among the weakest performers among major African economies in private sector credit provision.

According to the report, “Major African economies such as Kenya (31.6 per cent), Egypt (28.3 per cent), Côte d’Ivoire (21.4 per cent), and Nigeria (9.4 per cent) remain well below comparable emerging lower-middle-income market economies such as Vietnam (121.6 per cent), Malaysia (121.5 per cent), and Chile (111.8 per cent).”

The AfDB stated that Africa’s domestic credit to the private sector averaged 34.6 per cent of GDP between 2020 and 2024, the lowest level among global regions and a decline from the previous decade.

It noted that most bank lending across the continent remained concentrated in short-term and low-risk assets rather than long-term investments capable of generating stronger development outcomes.

The report stated, “Low intermediation implies that Africa’s financial institutions are unable to optimally support the development of the private sector and contribute meaningfully to economic growth and development.”

The AfDB attributed the weak credit environment to poor financial intermediation and low domestic savings mobilisation.

It noted that many African countries recorded low deposit-to-GDP ratios, with the continental median standing below 32 per cent. Africa’s gross domestic savings averaged 16.6 per cent of GDP between 2021 and 2024, far below the global average of 27.3 per cent.

According to the report, weak savings mobilisation constrains banks’ ability to extend credit, limits balance-sheet expansion and reduces access to stable, low-cost funding.

The bank also blamed regulatory weaknesses for the limited availability of credit to businesses. It stated that poorly designed or weakly enforced regulations increase compliance costs and uncertainty, thereby discouraging lending to the private sector.

The report added that weak collateral enforcement, slow judicial processes and stringent prudential requirements increase perceived credit risks and encourage financial institutions to focus on low-risk borrowers.

“Countries with strong regulatory frameworks tend to have higher private sector credit as a share of GDP,” the AfDB said.

The lender further observed that commercial banks and other financial institutions across Africa remained major holders of government securities, a trend that reduces resources available for lending to businesses.

In its assessment of Nigeria, the AfDB described the country’s financial system as shallow and said stock market capitalisation averaged just 11.8 per cent of GDP between 2020 and 2024, among the lowest levels in Africa.

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