A transition toward consolidation is now defining the monetary policy stance, as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) moves to sustain recent macroeconomic gains through improved policy alignment and institutional coherence.
Speaking at the 2026 Monetary Policy Forum, Olayemi Cardoso, the CBN governor, presented a five-pillar framework designed to shift the focus from stabilisation to sustainability.
The strategy comes as key stakeholders, including bank executives and government officials, expressed a consensus on the direction of economic policy, while cautioning that consistency will be critical to preserving recent gains.
“We are now in a phase of consolidation,” Cardoso said, noting that the CBN’s tightening stance and foreign exchange reforms have begun to yield results across inflation, reserves, and investor confidence.
A notable takeaway from the forum was the growing convergence between monetary and fiscal authorities, long seen as a weak link in Nigeria’s macroeconomic management framework.
Wale Edun, the minister of finance and coordinating minister of the economy, reinforced this alignment, describing the current phase as a transition toward growth anchored on stability. He projected that interest rates could gradually decline as inflation moderates, provided reform momentum is sustained.
The banking sector, represented by Oliver Alawuba of United Bank for Africa, also threw its weight behind the policy direction, noting that financial institutions have been among the primary beneficiaries of recent reforms. However, lenders stressed that policy predictability (not just direction) would determine long-term investment flows.
The CBN’s consolidation strategy is anchored on five core pillars: disinflation toward single-digit levels, exchange rate stability, reserve accumulation via sustainable inflows, interbank market deepening, and enhanced monetary policy transmission efficiency.
Unlike earlier phases marked by bold reforms, the emphasis is now on refining the system, ensuring that policy signals flow more efficiently through the financial system and translate into real sector outcomes such as price stability and economic expansion.
Muhammad Abdullahi, the CBN deputy governor, underscored this shift, noting that modern monetary policy increasingly hinges on credibility, communication, and market expectations. According to him, sustained engagement with stakeholders is essential to aligning policy intent with economic outcomes.
The consolidation push follows a period of significant policy adjustments, including FX market reforms and monetary tightening, which have helped stabilise key indicators. Inflation has shown early signs of moderation, while external reserves have strengthened, supported by improved market sentiment.
Yet, policymakers acknowledge that these gains remain fragile.
Cardoso warned that sustaining stability would require disciplined fiscal operations and continued coordination across institutions. He also highlighted the importance of building reserves through organic inflows, a move aimed at reducing reliance on volatile capital and strengthening buffers against external shocks.






