Edun, NACCIMA Team up to drive Private-Sector-Led Economic Renewal

Nigeria’s path to prosperity is being redrawn — and leading the charge is a bold, private-sector-driven vision for economic transformation.
On Thursday in Abuja, the Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, hosted a high-level delegation from the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), led by its Director General, Mr. Sola Obadimu.
Director of Information and Public Relations, Mohammed Manga in a statement indicated that the goal to forge a united front to fast-track Nigeria’s journey toward inclusive growth, resilience, and a $1 trillion economy.
Minister Edun reaffirmed the Tinubu Administration’s unwavering commitment to unleashing the full power of the private sector as the engine room of national development. He spotlighted key wins — the stabilising naira, growing investor confidence from both the diaspora and within, and the surge in local production aimed at cutting back on imports — as signs of real progress.
In his remarks, Mr. Obadimu applauded the administration’s bold steps, particularly the removal of fuel subsidies and exchange rate harmonisation, describing them as critical pivots toward economic stability. Yet, he pushed for more: greater clarity on taxation, easier access to trade finance for MSMEs, and policy timelines that match real-world implementation.
Both parties struck a common chord: transformation can’t happen in silos. It requires deep public-private synergy. They pledged to work in lockstep, putting the private sector at the centre of Nigeria’s economic renewal — driving entrepreneurship, jobs, innovation, and prosperity that reaches every corner of the country.
The meeting also highlighted NACCIMA’s landmark 65th Annual Conference and Investment Summit, themed Harnessing Private Sector Potential to Achieve a One Trillion Dollar Economy by 2030. The summit will serve as a national rallying point to mobilise ideas, capital, and partnerships around one of Nigeria’s most ambitious goals yet.
As Nigeria stands at the edge of a new economic dawn, one message is loud and clear: the private sector is not a bystander — it is the star of the show.