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Nigeria to track poverty, incomes as government seeks proof reforms are working

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 6:38 AM

By Isaac Anyaogu

LAGOS, July 16 (Reuters) – Nigeria plans to publish indicators tracking poverty, incomes and inequality as President Bola Tinubu’s government seeks to show that economic reforms ​are improving living standards in Africa’s largest economy, ‌the finance minister said on Thursday.

The planned scorecard is an attempt to answer a central criticism of Tinubu’s reform programme: that gains in revenue, foreign exchange liquidity and investor confidence have yet to translate into meaningful ‌relief ​for households facing high food, transport and ⁠living costs.

Speaking at a ⁠conference in Lagos, organised by BusinessDay newspaper, Taiwo Oyedele said the government would assess “shared prosperity” using three measures: reductions in multidimensional poverty, increases in real income per capita and ​lower inequality.

Tinubu’s government is seeking to demonstrate that reforms introduced in 2023, including scrapping a fuel subsidy and liberalising ⁠the naira, applauded by lenders and ⁠investors, are translating into broader gains for Nigerians ​after driving up inflation and living costs.

The International Monetary Fund said ​in June that while the reforms were improving investor ‌confidence and economic stability, 63% of Nigeria’s 200 million population remained in poverty and millions faced food insecurity.

The measures have also been accompanied by criticism over persistent corruption and allegations of ⁠unbudgeted government spending, raising questions about whether the sacrifices demanded of citizens are being matched by fiscal discipline.

Oyedele said inflation was easing, ⁠the foreign exchange ‌market was functioning more efficiently and investor ⁠interest was returning, but acknowledged that macroeconomic stability ​alone ‌would not be enough.

“A stable economy can still ​be a ⁠stagnant one if we become complacent,” he said.

Oyedele said the ministry of finance would be responsible for producing the scorecard but did not provide a timeline for publishing the indicators or say how frequently they would be updated.

(Reporting by Isaac Anyaogu; Editing ​by Sharon Singleton)