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CPPE flags weak credit allocation despite bank recapitalisation in Nigeria
The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) has raised concerns over persistent structural weaknesses in Nigeria’s credit system, warning that despite a successful bank recapitalisation exercise, lending remains skewed and largely disconnected from productive sectors.
The think tank stressed that stronger bank balance sheets must now translate into meaningful support for the real economy.
In a policy brief released on Sunday, and signed by Chief Executive Officer Muda Yusuf, CPPE commended the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for executing a smooth and orderly recapitalisation programme.
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**What the think tank is saying **
While the recapitalisation has strengthened the banking sector’s resilience, CPPE warned that Nigeria’s financial intermediation remains weak, with private sector credit at just 17% of GDP in 2025—well below the sub-Saharan African average of 25% and the 34% benchmark for lower-middle-income countries.
CPPE stated that consumer credit accounts for only 7 percent of total lending, below the 15–25% regional range.
The CPPE highlighted that this imbalance constrains financing for capital-intensive sectors such as manufacturing, agriculture, infrastructure, and real estate, undermining economic diversification and industrialisation goals.
More Insights
The CPPE identifies structural barriers that continue to limit the impact of banking sector strength on the real economy:
CPPE emphasized that policy focus must now shift from recapitalisation to improving financial intermediation and ensuring credit flows effectively into productive sectors.
What you should know
The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Olayemi Cardoso, recently disclosed that 32 banks in Nigeria have already met the revised minimum capital requirements under the ongoing recapitalisation programme.
The CBN earlier said that Nigerian banks mobilised a total of N4.61 trillion in fresh capital under its ongoing recapitalisation programme, reflecting strong investor appetite and growing foreign participation in the sector.
The CBN noted that the recapitalisation exercise is already yielding measurable outcomes, particularly in terms of improved investor confidence and regional expansion by Nigerian banks.
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