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Nigeria's Security Crisis and Fiscal Pressures Create a Perfect Storm for Business Continuity in West Africa

ABI Analysis · Nigeria macro Sentiment: -0.70 (negative) · 18/03/2026
Nigeria is simultaneously grappling with two interconnected crises that pose significant operational and investment risks for European entrepreneurs: deteriorating security conditions in critical regions and mounting fiscal pressures that are constraining government capacity to respond effectively. The recent improvised explosive device (IED) attacks in Maiduguri exemplify the persistent security challenges plaguing Nigeria's northeast. While the Inspector-General of Police has publicly visited affected hospitals and pledged enhanced security measures, such commitments have become increasingly hollow given documented patterns of institutional dysfunction. According to recent analyses, the Nigerian Police Force under previous leadership became instrumentalized for media suppression rather than security provision—a troubling indicator of institutional priorities during periods of crisis. This suggests that rhetorical assurances of improved security may not translate into tangible operational improvements for businesses dependent on supply chain continuity through affected regions. Simultaneously, Nigeria's federal government is pursuing aggressive short-term borrowing to meet immediate fiscal obligations. The Central Bank raised nearly N3 trillion (approximately €3.6 billion) through Treasury Bills auctions within a two-week period, including a single N1.05 trillion auction. This emergency financing approach reveals the government's constrained fiscal position and limited capacity for sustained security investments or infrastructure maintenance—the very interventions necessary to stabilize volatile regions. The

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Gateway Intelligence
European investors with existing Nigerian operations should immediately reassess supply chain vulnerability to northeastern disruptions and consider geographic diversification toward southern coastal corridors where government security capacity remains comparatively stronger. For new market entrants, the combination of security deterioration and fiscal constraint suggests delaying expansion into resource-dependent sectors until either geopolitical stabilization occurs or the CBN's monetary policy signals fiscal consolidation rather than emergency borrowing. Monitor naira depreciation trajectories closely—accelerating weakness would indicate imminent inflation spiral and should trigger hedging strategies or exit timeline acceleration.

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Sources: Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Nairametrics, AllAfrica

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