NEWS
IMF Projects Nigeria to Become Africa’s Largest Contributor to Global Economic Growth in 2026, Overtaking South Africa and Joining World’s Top 10 Growth Drivers
Nigeria is on course to emerge as Africa’s leading contributor to global economic growth in 2026, surpassing South Africa and cementing its position among the world’s Top 10 contributors to global real GDP growth, according to the latest estimates by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The Fund projects that Nigeria will account for approximately 1.5 percent of total global real GDP growth in 2026, making it the only African country expected to feature on the global Top 10 list. This development signals a notable shift in Africa’s economic landscape and underscores Nigeria’s gradual return to growth momentum after a period of macroeconomic stress.
In previous IMF outlooks, South Africa consistently ranked ahead of Nigeria in Africa’s share of global growth, largely due to its larger nominal economy and relatively steadier performance. However, Nigeria’s economic challenges over the past two to three years, marked by currency instability, high inflation, and policy uncertainty, had dampened its contribution. The latest projections indicate that this trend is reversing.
Analysts attribute Nigeria’s improved outlook to a series of major economic reforms, including exchange-rate adjustments, the removal of fuel subsidies, and ongoing fiscal consolidation efforts. These measures, though initially painful, are beginning to lay the foundation for stronger and more sustainable growth, supported by expanding domestic demand and renewed investor interest.
The IMF forecasts that Nigeria’s real GDP will grow by 4.4 percent in 2026, before moderating slightly to 4.1 percent in 2027. This pace of expansion is well above the African average and significantly higher than that of several large emerging and developed economies.
The Fund notes that recent policy reforms aimed at stabilising public finances and restoring macroeconomic balance are central to this outlook. Exchange-rate realignment has improved transparency in the foreign exchange market, while fuel subsidy removal has reduced fiscal leakages and freed up resources for priority spending.
Nevertheless, the IMF cautions that important domestic indicators remain under strain. Inflation, exchange-rate stability, real wages, employment levels, and household purchasing power continue to face pressure, underscoring the need for sustained reforms, stronger social safety nets, and structural transformation to translate growth into broad-based welfare gains.
While Nigeria’s projected 1.5 percent contribution to global GDP growth represents a significant milestone, economists emphasise that deep-rooted structural challenges, including infrastructure gaps, productivity constraints, and governance issues, must still be addressed to secure long-term prosperity.
South Africa, currently Africa’s largest economy by nominal GDP, is projected to grow by 1.4 percent in 2026 and 1.5 percent in 2027, according to the IMF. This comparatively modest outlook reflects persistent headwinds that continue to weigh on the country’s economic performance.
Key constraints include chronic power shortages, logistical bottlenecks, weak private sector investment, and high unemployment, all of which have suppressed industrial output and limited domestic consumption. Years of underinvestment in critical state-owned enterprises such as Eskom (power) and Transnet (logistics) have compounded these challenges.
In addition, trade frictions and tariff-related uncertainties with major partners, including the United States, have further dampened growth prospects, particularly in the manufacturing and mining sectors. As a result, South Africa’s projected real GDP growth of 1.4 percent in 2026 is expected to translate into a much smaller contribution to global expansion than Nigeria’s faster-growing economy.
The IMF projections have attracted widespread attention from global business leaders and market watchers. Tesla CEO Elon Musk shared the data on X, remarking that “the balance of power is changing,” a comment widely interpreted as pointing to the steady shift in global economic momentum away from traditional Western growth centres toward emerging economies.
This evolving landscape is increasingly shaped by countries such as China, India, and now Nigeria, whose large populations, expanding consumer markets, and reform-driven growth trajectories are playing a growing role in driving global output.
For Nigeria, the IMF’s forecast represents both a vote of confidence and a call to action: a confirmation that recent reforms are beginning to yield results, and a reminder that sustaining this momentum will require consistent policy implementation, institutional strengthening, and inclusive growth strategies that ensure the benefits of expansion reach all segments of society.
