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Nigeria's Economy on the Rise: What the Trillion-Dollar Dream Means for You

A new report says Nigeria's economy is back on a growth path. We break down what the numbers mean for ordinary Nigerians and businesses in 2026. For the first time in years, the headlines about Nigeria's economy are carrying a different tone. Instead of recession warnings, debt alarms, and currency crises, a growing chorus of analysts, institutions, and government officials are speaking about growth, recovery, and even a trillion-dollar future. But what does this mean for the average Nigerian  the trader in Alaba market, the graduate job-hunting in Port Harcourt, or the small business owner in Kano struggling with high input costs? A fresh report released this week by Quartus Economics, a Lagos-based research house, has put the conversation back at the top of the national agenda. Titled The Journey to a Trillion-Dollar Economy: Nigeria on the Rise Again , the report draws on data from the Central Bank of Nigeria, the National Bureau of Statistics, the World Bank, and the ...

Peter Obi, Kwankwaso storm NDC secretariat in Abuja, set to officially join party

Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso arrived at the NDC secretariat in Abuja on May 3, 2026, officially dumping the ADC as they build their "OK ticket" for 2027. Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso arrived at the NDC secretariat in Abuja on May 3, 2026, officially dumping the ADC as they build their "OK ticket" for 2027. In a dramatic political development that has sent shockwaves across Nigeria's opposition landscape, former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi and former Kano State Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso arrived at the national secretariat of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) in Abuja on Sunday, May 3, 2026, amid cheers from supporters and intense media attention. The two heavyweight politicians, who are widely regarded as the faces of the "OK ticket" — a potential Obi-Kwankwaso presidential alliance — were received at the NDC's Abuja office alongside Anambra Central Senator Victor Umeh , signalling that their long-anticipated defection from t...

Igbo Apprenticeship System Gains Global Recognition as Nigeria Pushes for Policy Adoption in 2026

As Nigeria's federal government intensifies its search for solutions to youth unemployment, a system that has existed quietly in Igbo communities for generations is now being pushed forward as a national model  and a growing number of young Nigerians are choosing it over university education. The Igbo Apprenticeship System, widely known as Igba Boi , is at the centre of fresh policy conversations in 2026, even as it continues to produce some of the country's most successful business owners without government funding, formal institutions, or international support. Visblog reports on what Igba Boi means, how it works, why its success rate is drawing national attention, and what a formal government endorsement could mean for millions of young Nigerians. What Igba Boi Means and Where It Comes From The term Igba Boi comes from the Igbo language of southeastern Nigeria. Loosely translated, it means "to serve" or "to be under someone's care for training....

32 Million Nigerians Are Battling Mental Illness Right Now and the Government Has Almost Nothing to Offer

As depression, anxiety, and psychological distress rise sharply among Nigerians in 2026, mental health professionals are warning that the country's near-absent mental health infrastructure is creating a silent epidemic with devastating consequences. There is a conversation that millions of Nigerians are not having  with their families, with their doctors, with anyone. It happens in silence, behind closed doors, in the space between a sleepless night and another morning of pretending that everything is fine. It is the conversation about mental health, and in Nigeria in 2026, the weight of that unspoken conversation is crushing people in ways that the country has barely begun to reckon with. A report released in March 2026 by the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital in Yaba, Lagos, in collaboration with the Association of Psychiatrists in Nigeria, has painted the most comprehensive picture yet of the scale of mental health challenges facing Nigerian adults. The findings are dee...

Made in Nigeria Is No Longer a Joke : How Local Manufacturers Are Finally Winning the Battle for Nigerian Consumers

After years of being dismissed as inferior, Nigerian-made products are gaining serious market share in 2026 as currency pressures, improved quality, and shifting consumer attitudes drive a quiet manufacturing revolution. For most of the past three decades, "Made in Nigeria" was a phrase that Nigerian consumers said with a combination of affection and apology. Affection for the local hustle behind it. Apology because everyone in the room knew that, in most product categories, the local version was assumed to be inferior to the imported one. That assumption, slow as it has been to shift, is now cracking  and the numbers in 2026 are beginning to tell a different story. READ MORE : Nigeria's Cement War: How Dangote, BUA and Lafarge Are Fighting for Survival in a Collapsing Market A combination of forces  the naira's sustained weakness making imports dramatically more expensive, deliberate quality improvements by local manufacturers who saw opportunity in...

Governors Are Sitting on Local Government Funds While Councils Crumble And Nigerians Are Fed Up

A damning new report shows Nigerian state governors have continued to withhold local government allocations in 2026, leaving councils unable to pay salaries or deliver basic services to millions of Nigerians. Every month, the Federation Account Allocation Committee sits in Abuja and shares revenue among the federal government, states, and local governments. Every month, local government allocations leave Abuja. And every month, in state after state across Nigeria, those allocations disappear into state government accounts  never reaching the councils they were constitutionally meant for. READ MORE : UNIPORT Lecturer Warns Against Deceptive ‘Sign-Out’ Celebrations This is not new. It has been happening for decades. But a detailed report released in April 2026 by the Joint Account Allocation Committee monitoring group, backed by civil society data from BudgIT and the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room, has put fresh and damning numbers to a practice that the Supreme Court of ...

WAEC 2026: What the Results Reveal And What They Carefully Hide

WAEC 2026: The Numbers Say “Improvement” — But the Reality Tells a Harder Story As WAEC releases its 2026 results, analysts warn that pass rates are masking a deeper crisis in Nigerian education — from underfunded schools to teachers who haven't been trained in years. Every year, when the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) releases its results, Nigeria goes through a familiar ritual. Officials highlight the pass rates. Headlines focus on percentages. Parents either celebrate or quietly worry about what comes next. And then, almost as quickly as the conversation begins, it fades  until the next cycle begins again. READ MORE: Can Nigeria's Digital Exam Infrastructure Handle Millions of Candidates Without Breaking But behind the numbers WAEC publishes lies a more complicated and uncomfortable truth about education in Nigeria  one that cannot be captured in percentages alone, and one the country has yet to confront with the seriousness it deserves. Vis...