By Progress Godfrey
ABUJA – The Federal Government has called for stronger development finance and greater private capital mobilisation to support its ambition to build a $1 trillion economy, stressing that public funds alone cannot finance the country’s plan.
Speaking at the Bank of Industry (BOI) Development Partners’ Roundtable and presentation of the 2025 Annual Development Impact Report (ADIR) in Abuja on Thursday, the Minister of State for Budget and Economic Planning, Dr Doris Uzoka-Anite, said Nigeria must reposition its development finance institutions to attract investment and support productive sectors.
She said the country’s economic reforms were aimed at creating an economy that attracts investment, expands enterprise and creates jobs. According to her, achieving the $1 trillion economy target would require sustained investment, stronger institutions, better project preparation and closer collaboration with development partners.
Uzoka-Anite said Nigeria was building a coordinated financing ecosystem that brings together public finance, domestic and international capital, development finance institutions, commercial finance, climate finance and other innovative financing instruments to unlock investment.
She said, “The aspirations of the Renewed Hope Agenda, the National Development Plan, and Nigeria Agenda 2050 cannot be financed through annual budgets alone.”
The minister added that every public investment must attract private capital, urging development partners to align their financing with Nigeria’s pipeline of bankable projects to speed up investment and economic growth.
Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, Senator John Enoh, said the Bank of Industry had become a strategic institution for implementing Nigeria’s industrial policy through financing for manufacturers, Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), youth-led businesses and other productive sectors.
He said the recently launched Nigerian Industrial Policy was already being implemented through a clear performance framework, with the first 90-day implementation report highlighting progress in industrial clusters, MSME development, skills training and export competitiveness.
“Development finance must ultimately be measured by the results, by the jobs it creates, by the industries it builds, and the lives it improves,” Enoh said.
Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of BOI, Dr Olasupo Olusi, said the bank had shifted from measuring success by the volume of loans disbursed to measuring the development impact created by its financing.
He said the ADIR reflected BOI’s commitment to accountability, transparency and measuring the real impact of its interventions on businesses, communities and the wider economy.
Olusi assured that the bank would continue to deepen strategic partnerships and align its financing with Nigeria’s development priorities to promote inclusive growth, industrialisation and shared prosperity.