As Nigeria prepares to turn the page on a turbulent year, the public mood is one of weary skepticism. Economic indicators cited by the government show modest improvement—GDP growth, falling inflation, rising reserves—but for millions of Nigerians, these figures feel like empty statistics, a recovery on paper that has not translated into food on the table or safety in their communities.
The year 2026, therefore, presents a stark ultimatum for President Bola Tinubu. It is the year his administration’s signature reforms must finally deliver palpable relief, or risk being deemed a failure by a populace running out of patience.
The High-Stakes Agenda: Security, Implementation, and Public Trust
President Tinubu has laid out an ambitious roadmap for 2026, from a landmark ₦58.18 trillion budget to transformational tax reforms and a revamped security doctrine. The vision is comprehensive, but history is littered with well-crafted Nigerian budgets that failed at the point of execution. For 2026 to be different, the administration must execute a fundamental pivot in three critical areas.
Priority 1: From Security Spending to Measurable Security Results
The 2026 budget makes an unprecedented commitment to security, allocating ₦5.41 trillion, its largest single-sector vote. This is a necessary response to a crisis that has crippled farming, commerce, and daily life. However, past increases in security funding have not consistently yielded safety.
· The New Doctrine Must Be Action, Not Just Rhetoric: Tinubu has declared a “no mercy” stance, pledging to classify all armed non-state actors as terrorists and target their financiers. In 2026, this cannot remain a speech. It must be followed by transparent, high-profile prosecutions of kingpins and their backers to shatter the culture of impunity.
· Link Funding to Community-Verified Outcomes: The public is skeptical of “security votes”. The government must move beyond opaque spending to clear, localized metrics: the number of farmers safely returning to fields in Benue, the reduction in kidnapping incidents on major highways, the reopening of shut markets in the North-West. Security success must be felt, not just announced.
· Confront the State Police Imperative: As emphasized by community leaders, the structural flaw in Nigeria’s security architecture is a federal police force unable to respond to local threats. 2026 must be the year Tinubu courageously champions the creation of state police, providing governors with the tools to fulfill their role as chief security officers.
Priority 2: From Budget Presentation to Impeccable, Timely Execution
The President has vowed 2026 will mark a “decisive shift” in budget discipline, ending the ruinous practice of running multiple, overlapping budgets. This pledge is the cornerstone of all other plans.
· Enforce the “Single Budget” Deadline with Ironclad Discipline: Tinubu has ordered all old capital liabilities funded and closed by March 31, 2026. This deadline is non-negotiable. The Finance and Budget Ministries must be held publicly accountable for meeting it, ensuring 2026’s capital projects begin on time in April, not in the inflationary rush of year’s end.
· Make Capital Expenditure the True Priority: While ₦26.08 trillion is earmarked for capital projects, history shows recurrent spending often gets first claim. The President must direct that capital releases for infrastructure, power, and agriculture be given equal—if not greater—priority as monthly salaries from Day One. As experts warn, delaying these projects fuels inflation and kills growth.
· Deliver “The People’s Tax Reform” Flawlessly: The 2026 tax reforms, designed to exempt 97% of small businesses and ease burdens on low-income earners, are a potential masterstroke for economic morale. Their January 1 launch must be seamless. Any widespread confusion or over-taxation due to poor implementation would shatter public trust and strangle the small businesses it aims to liberate.
Priority 3: From Macroeconomic Stability to Microeconomic Relief
The bridge between stabilizing national accounts and improving individual lives is built on affordable power and targeted support for job creators.
· Declare a “State of Emergency” on Power Supply: Economists are unanimous: Nigeria “cannot grow on a generator-dependent economy”. The Band A, B, C system is not delivering for industry. Tinubu must task his energy team with one brutal KPI for 2026: guarantee a minimum of 18-20 hours of daily power for industrial and major business clusters. Without this, manufacturing revival is a fantasy.
· Launch a Targeted Survival Fund for MSMEs: While large corporations get tax breaks, small businesses face extinction from high energy and input costs. The 2026 agenda must include a simple, accessible grant or low-interest loan program for verified MSMEs, specifically for acquiring solar power solutions or CNG conversion kits to reduce their crippling energy overhead.
· Make Food Affordability the Defining Economic Metric: The government cites falling inflation, but food prices remain agonizingly high. Security gains must be directly linked to agricultural output. The budget’s focus on agriculture—from inputs to storage—is meaningless unless it results in a visible, sustained drop in the price of staples like rice, garri, and beans by the end of Q3 2026.
The Path Forward: A Year of Relentless, Transparent Delivery
For President Tinubu, 2026 is the year of consolidation, but not of comfort. It is the year for relentless, almost obsessive, focus on the mechanics of delivery. The grand visions and reforms of the past two years have set the stage. Now, the nation demands a performance.
The promise is to transition from a period of “temporary pains” to “permanent gains”. That transition will be judged by the mother who feels safe sending her child to school in Niger State, the tailor in Aba whose shop stays open thanks to steady electricity, and the farmer in Benue who can finally work his land without fear. For them, 2026 must be the year the government’s plans become their lived reality. Nothing less will suffice.















