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    HomeOthersFG Introduces Investment Budgeting to drive Economic Growth 

    FG Introduces Investment Budgeting to drive Economic Growth 

    FG Introduces Investment Budgeting to drive Economic Growth

    In its avowed determination to accelerate Nigeria’s economic growth and development, the Federal Government has introduced investment budgeting as a key component of the 2026 Budget. This innovative approach marks a decisive shift in how public finance is structured to drive long-term growth and development.

    Speaking at the National Economic Council in Abuja on Monday, and during the 2026 Budget defence sessions, the Honourable Minister of State for Finance Dr. Doris Uzoka-Anite disclosed that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu mandated the inclusion of Investment Budgeting as a foundational pillar of the 2026 Budget design. This directive, she said, positions the budget not only as a fiscal document but as a growth execution tool aligned with the Renewed Hope National Development Plan 2026 to 2030.

    The Minster explained that the introduction of Investment Budgeting reflects the President’s broader economic strategy to move Nigeria beyond stabilisation and into a sustained phase of accelerated, inclusive growth. It recognises that achieving Nigeria’s ambition of a one trillion dollar economy requires more than recurrent spending and traditional capital allocations. It requires deliberate, structured investment that mobilises private capital at scale.

    She explained further that investment budgeting introduces a third pillar to public finance management, alongside revenue and expenditure. While recurrent expenditure sustains government operations and capital expenditure builds public assets, investment budgeting is designed to deliberately crowd in private capital, de-risk priority sectors, and generate long-term economic returns through productive assets

    Under this framework, the said, government resources are deployed strategically to unlock investment in infrastructure, agriculture, manufacturing, energy, housing, digital infrastructure, transport, and logistics. Rather than government acting as the sole financier of development, the state becomes the catalyst, using limited public funds to mobilise significantly larger pools of domestic and international private capital.

    Dr. Uzoka-Anite emphasised that this approach is essential given Nigeria’s fiscal realities. Public revenues remain constrained, debt service obligations limit fiscal space, and the country’s infrastructure financing needs far exceed what the public balance sheet alone can support.

    According to a statement issued by the Office of the Honourable Minister of State for Finance,  at current levels of public infrastructure spending, Nigeria would require more than a century to close its infrastructure gap. Investment Budgeting addresses this constraint directly by making private capital mobilisation a core feature of budget design, Uzoka-Anite stated.

    The framework also aligns closely with the Domestic Growth Acceleration Strategy and the Renewed Hope National Development Plan, both of which seek to translate macroeconomic stabilisation into broad-based production, job creation, exports, and sustainable revenue growth. By embedding Investment Budgeting into the 2026 Budget, the Tinubu Administration has institutionalised a mechanism that shifts Nigeria from incidental growth to intentional growth.

    In practical terms, Investment Budgeting focuses exclusively on growth-generating, income-producing assets. It integrates private sector participation from the project design stage, leverages innovative financing tools such as public private partnerships and blended finance, spreads costs over the life of assets, and creates dedicated revenue streams to support debt service and investor returns.

    This reform represents another landmark intervention under President Tinubu’s leadership, following difficult but necessary stabilisation measures including fuel subsidy removal and foreign exchange reforms. With macroeconomic credibility gradually restored, Investment Budgeting provides the bridge from reform to results.

    As articulated by Dr. Uzoka-Anite at the National Economic Council, Investment Budgeting is not optional. It is essential to achieving the scale of growth required to lift incomes, create jobs, and deliver lasting prosperity to Nigerians under the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    With this bold move, Nigeria is poised to unlock new growth avenues, create jobs, and improve living standards, underscoring President Tinubu’s commitment to transforming Nigeria’s economy and delivering prosperity for all Nigerians.

     

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