A decision by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to redirect a larger share of oil revenues to government coffers is being interpreted by economists as an attempt to stabilise Nigeria’s public finances and reassure investors about fiscal governance in Africa’s largest crude producer.
The policy restores 60 per cent of profit oil and gas proceeds from Production Sharing Contracts to the distributable national pool, reversing a structure introduced after the 2021 industry overhaul that had allowed the state oil company to retain a majority share. Analysts say the move could strengthen federal and state budgets at a time of currency pressure, rising debt servicing costs and constrained capital inflows into Nigeria.
The Capital Market Academics of Nigeria (CMAN) welcomed the measure, describing it as a governance reform with implications for capital-market confidence. In a statement signed by its president Uche Uwaleke, the group said: “This marks one of the most courageous reforms of his administration and a decisive step toward strengthening fiscal transparency and equity in revenue distribution.”
Since the post-reform framework took effect, only 40 per cent of profit oil from such contracts flowed into the revenue pool shared by federal, state and local governments. The remainder was retained by Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) through exploration allocations and management cost structures. Critics argued that the arrangement blurred the boundary between commercial operations and public revenue management.
Reversing that split could have knock-on effects beyond government budgets. Higher and more predictable allocations through the Federation Account Allocation Committee may improve subnational fiscal stability, potentially supporting infrastructure investment and debt repayment capacity, factors closely watched by sovereign bond investors.
The association also stressed the importance of reinforcing the commercial independence of the national oil company. “As a limited liability company, NNPCL must operate independently on its own revenues rather than relying on public funds,” the statement noted, adding that further reforms, particularly around joint-venture assets, could deepen fiscal clarity.
Oversight mechanisms remain a key concern for markets. The group recommended formal involvement of the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) in supervising implementation, arguing that transparency will determine whether the policy shift translates into durable credibility gains.
Nigeria has struggled to attract consistent portfolio investment amid concerns over policy predictability and oil-sector governance. Economists believe clearer revenue rules could support credit ratings, deepen domestic debt markets and boost confidence among institutional investors evaluating African energy exporters.








