Abuja, Nigeria – The federal government has announced that President Bola Tinubu is poised to give assent to the National Digital Economy and E‑Governance Bill, 2025 this week, a move seen as central to delivering his ambition of making Nigeria a US$1 trillion economy.
What You Should Know About The Bill
Presented by the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy and backed by the joint committees of the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the House of Representatives of Nigeria on ICT and Cybersecurity, the Bill aims to create a comprehensive legal framework governing Nigeria’s digital economy and e‑governance.
Key Features Include:
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A legal recognition and regulation of electronic transactions, digital signatures and communications.
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Mandatory for ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) to digitise operations and services, providing “regulatory clarity for electronic transactions”.
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Establishment of a national data‑exchange system to enable seamless data sharing between government and private sector, and strengthened frameworks for adoption of artificial intelligence in critical sectors.
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Infrastructure initiatives supporting the Bill: e.g., deployment of 90,000 km of fibre‑optic cable and nearly 4,000 new communication towers to reach underserved communities.
Why It Matters
The government argues the Bill is a critical component in positioning Nigeria as a powerhouse of digital innovation in Africa, and in scaling the digital economy’s contribution to national output. According to Bosun Tijani, the Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy:
“This Bill is being awaited by President Bola Tinubu for assent this week, being one of the catalysts for the actualisation of the projected $1 trillion economy.”
He stated that the digital economy sector, which once contributed about 16 % of GDP – is tracking at roughly 19 % and the target is 21 % by 2027.
If signed into law, the legislation would be touted as the first of its kind in Africa for comprehensively regulating the digital economy and e‑governance.
Potential Benefits and Challenges
Benefits Might Include:
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Accelerated growth in the ICT sector and related industries, boosting jobs and innovation.
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Improved ease of doing business through clearer rules for digital and electronic transactions.
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More efficient government services through mandated digitisation of public agencies.
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Broader connectivity, especially once infrastructure plans are delivered, reducing the digital divide.
Challenges and Caveats:
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Passage of a law is only the first step: successful implementation will require significant funding, coordination across federal, state and local governments, and strong regulatory institutions.
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Digitally disadvantaged segments (rural areas, low‑income communities) risk being left behind unless parallel efforts to build capacity and access are prioritised.
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Data privacy, cybersecurity risks, and ethical uses of AI will need robust safeguards – the law may establish frameworks, but enforcement will be key.
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Infrastructure rollout (fibre‑optics, towers) is ambitious; delays or cost overruns could hamper benefits.
What Happens Next
The Bill is expected to be laid for third reading in both chambers of the National Assembly this week and then forwarded for presidential assent. Once President Tinubu gives assent, the Bill will become an Act and come into force in due course (timing depending on provisions within the Act).
The government will then begin roll‑out of the supporting infrastructure and regulatory mechanisms.
Outlook
If all goes according to plan, our dear Nigeria could take a substantial leap towards modernising its economy and leveraging technology as a growth driver.
The coming months will be critical: translating the law’s promises into concrete action on the ground will determine whether the 21 % digital‑economy‑share‑of‑GDP target by 2027 is realistic.
Stakeholders – including private sector, civil society and state governments, will need to closely monitor and engage with the implementation process.

