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CBN’s Push For Single-Digit Inflation And Transition To Inflation Targeting

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has reaffirmed its commitment to achieving single-digit inflation (6–9%), as it transitions toward a full-fledged inflation-targeting monetary policy framework. This shift represents one of the most significant reforms in Nigeria’s monetary policy architecture in decades, combining measurable progress in disinflation with a forward-looking institutional overhaul.

This position was reinforced during a high-level engagement with the Nigerian Economic Society and members of the academic community in Abuja on March 18, 2026.

Inflation Trend: Sharp Decline Since 2024

Nigeria’s inflation trajectory has improved markedly:

This represents a dramatic reduction of more than half within roughly one year, signaling effective policy intervention.

Key dynamics:

Transition to Inflation Targeting

At the core of the CBN’s strategy is a structural shift toward inflation targeting, described by Muhammad Abdullahi as:

“A transparent, forward-looking, and rules-based monetary policy system anchored in long-term price stability.”

Key Features of the Framework

Abdullahi emphasized that this framework will:

Drivers of Disinflation and Reform Progress

Monetary Policy Tightening

These steps restored credibility and strengthened policy transmission.

Exchange Rate and FX Market Reforms

These measures significantly lowered imported inflation pressures.

Food Inflation Moderation

As a result, inflation is now less food-driven.

Financial Sector and Institutional Reforms

According to Abdullahi, these reforms are already yielding measurable outcomes.

Role of Stakeholder Engagement and Credibility

The CBN emphasized that inflation targeting is not purely technical—it depends heavily on trust and communication.

Victor Oboh highlighted that:

Support from stakeholders, including Baba Yusuf Musa, reinforces institutional credibility. He noted the importance of a credible central bank aligned with national economic goals.

Global Context and Emerging Risks

The CBN acknowledged that global conditions remain uncertain:

These risks make a credible monetary anchor even more essential for emerging economies like Nigeria.

Inflation Composition: Changing Structure

Although headline inflation has declined, underlying pressures persist:

This structural shift suggests that future disinflation will depend more on deep economic reforms than short-term policy tightening.

Outlook: Path to Single-Digit Inflation

The CBN’s medium-term outlook remains cautiously optimistic:

The bank projects continued gradual disinflation, barring major external shocks.

Implications for the Nigerian Economy

Positive Effects
Ongoing Challenges

Conclusion

Nigeria is entering a critical transition phase in monetary policy. The sharp drop in inflation—from 34.8% in 2024 to about 15% in 2026—demonstrates tangible progress. However, the shift to inflation targeting marks a deeper transformation beyond short-term stabilisation.

By adopting a rules-based, transparent framework, the CBN aims to entrench credibility, anchour expectations, and deliver sustainable price stability. The success of this transition will depend not only on policy tools but also on institutional trust, stakeholder collaboration, and resilience to global shocks.

The direction is clear: Nigeria is moving from reactive inflation management to a predictive, credibility-driven monetary regime—with single-digit inflation as its central goal.

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