The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) has endorsed the Central Bank of Nigeria’s decision to retain key monetary policy parameters, describing the move as a calculated shift toward economic stability at a time when global geopolitical tensions and domestic inflation risks are colliding.
In a policy brief released after the 305th Monetary Policy Committee meeting, the CPPE said the decision signaled growing policy maturity from the apex bank, particularly as central banks across emerging markets grapple with the inflationary consequences of rising energy prices and geopolitical instability linked to tensions involving Iran, Israel, and the United States.
The MPC retained the Monetary Policy Rate at 26.5%, leaving benchmark borrowing costs at their highest level in decades. The committee also retained the asymmetric corridor around the MPR, the Cash Reserve Ratio at 45% for deposit money banks, 15% for merchant banks, and 75% for non-TSA public sector deposits.
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The decision comes after Nigeria recorded consecutive increases in inflation in March and April 2026, reinforcing concerns that price pressures remain deeply entrenched even after aggressive monetary tightening over the past two years.
But unlike earlier policy cycles where higher inflation almost automatically translated into higher rates, the CPPE argued that the current inflation challenge is fundamentally different because it is being driven largely by structural and supply-side distortions rather than excessive consumer demand.
According to the group, further rate tightening at this stage could have worsened financing conditions for businesses already struggling with elevated energy costs, high logistics expenses, exchange-rate volatility, and weak consumer purchasing power.
“The decision to hold rates therefore demonstrates a commendable recognition that excessive tightening at this stage could suffocate productivity, weaken industrial recovery, constrain investment appetite and undermine employment generation,” the CPPE said.
“Economies do not grow on the strength of high interest rates; they grow on the strength of productivity, enterprise, investment confidence and policy coherence.”
The intervention highlights a growing debate within Nigeria’s economic policy circles over whether monetary tightening alone can meaningfully curb inflation in an economy where food insecurity, infrastructure deficits, insecurity in farming regions, high transportation costs, and foreign exchange pass-through effects remain major drivers of prices.
The CPPE stressed that while monetary policy remains an important stabilization tool, it cannot repair broken supply chains, resolve geopolitical disruptions, or eliminate structural bottlenecks affecting production and distribution across the economy.
Its position also reflects mounting concerns within the private sector over the impact of elevated borrowing costs on manufacturing, agriculture, construction, and small business expansion. Commercial lending rates in Nigeria have surged sharply following the CBN’s tightening cycle, making access to affordable credit increasingly difficult for many businesses.
The decision to pause rate hikes also comes against the backdrop of rising global oil prices triggered by disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical energy shipping routes. Higher crude prices typically support Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings as an oil exporter, but they also intensify domestic inflationary pressures through higher fuel, transportation, and production costs.
FX Stability Emerges as Key Policy Anchor
Beyond interest rates, the CPPE commended the central bank’s recent efforts to stabilize the foreign exchange market, describing exchange-rate management as one of the most critical pillars supporting macroeconomic confidence.
“A stable currency environment improves investor sentiment, moderates imported inflation, enhances planning predictability and reduces speculative distortions within the market,” the group stated.
“Indeed, the recent policy direction of the Central Bank reflects a transition from crisis management to confidence management, a development that is critical for restoring macroeconomic credibility and rebuilding investor trust in the Nigerian economy.”
The remarks are notable because exchange-rate instability has remained one of Nigeria’s biggest macroeconomic vulnerabilities since the sweeping FX reforms introduced under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration. Sharp naira depreciation over the past two years triggered imported inflation, raised debt servicing costs, and worsened pressure on businesses dependent on imported raw materials and machinery.
However, recent improvements in external reserves and relative stability in the foreign exchange market have helped ease some concerns among investors and businesses.
CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso disclosed after the MPC meeting that Nigeria’s gross external reserves climbed to $49.49 billion as of May 15, 2026, from $48.35 billion at the end of March. According to Cardoso, the reserve position now covers more than nine months of imports for goods and services, a level widely viewed as supportive of currency stability and external sector resilience.
The CPPE also praised fiscal authorities for ongoing fiscal consolidation measures and improved revenue mobilization efforts, noting that stronger coordination between monetary and fiscal authorities is becoming increasingly important as Nigeria attempts to rebuild investor confidence.
The group further applauded the banking sector recapitalization programme initiated by the CBN, describing it as a critical long-term reform aimed at strengthening financial intermediation and positioning Nigerian banks to support industrialization, infrastructure financing, and economic expansion.
Importantly, the CPPE noted that the recapitalization process has so far avoided widespread panic within the financial system, with no significant depositor anxiety or major shareholder losses reported. Still, it urged the apex bank to maintain transparent communication with lenders facing recapitalization-related transition challenges in order to preserve public confidence in the banking system.
The endorsement from the CPPE is likely to boost expectations that the CBN may maintain a cautious wait-and-see approach in the near term, especially as policymakers weigh the inflationary risks of global oil shocks against the danger of stifling economic recovery through excessive tightening.



