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2026 BUDGET SPEECH “BUDGET OF CONSOLIDATION, RENEWED RESILIENCE AND SHARED PROSPERITY”

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Presented by:

His Excellency, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR
President, Federal Republic of Nigeria, At the Joint Session of the National Assembly, Abuja, Friday, 19 December 2025

PROTOCOLS

Distinguished Senate President,
Rt. Honourable Speaker and Honourable Members of the House of Representatives,

Distinguished Senators and Honourable Members of the National Assembly,

Fellow Nigerians,

1. I am here today to fulfil an essential constitutional obligation by presenting the 2026 Appropriation Bill to this esteemed Joint Session of the National Assembly for your consideration.

2. This budget represents a defining moment in our national journey of reform and transformation. Over the last two and a half years, my government has methodically confronted long‑standing structural weaknesses, stabilised our economy, rebuilt confidence, and laid a durable foundation for the construction of a more resilient, inclusive, and dynamic Nigeria.

3. Though necessary, the reforms have not been painless. Families and businesses have faced pressure; established systems have been disrupted; and budget execution has been tested. I acknowledge these difficulties plainly. Yet, I am here, today, to assure Nigerians that their sacrifices are not in vain. The path of reform is seldom smooth, but it is the surest route to lasting stability and shared prosperity.

4. Today, I present a Budget that consolidates our gains, strengthens our resilience, and takes this country from out of the dark tunnel of hopelessness, from survival to growth.

5. The 2026 Budget is themed: “Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity”. It reflects our determination to lock in macroeconomic stability, deepen competitiveness, and ensure that growth translates into decent jobs, rising incomes, and a better quality of life across for every Nigerian.

6. Mr. Chairman, Leaders of the National Assembly, while the global outlook continues to improve, this Budget aims to further strengthen our Nigerian economy to benefit all our citizens.

7. I am encouraged that our reform efforts are already yielding measurable results:
1) Our economy grew by 3.98 per cent in Q3 2025, up from 3.86 per cent in Q3 2024.

2) Inflation has moderated for eight consecutive months, with headline inflation declining to 14.45 per cent in November 2025, from 24.23 per cent in March 2025. With stabilising food and energy prices, tighter monetary conditions, and improving supply responses, we expect the deflationary trend to persist over the 2026 horizon, barring major supply shocks.

3) Oil production has improved, supported by enhanced security, technology deployment, and sector reforms.

4) Non‑oil revenues have expanded significantly through better tax administration.

5) Investor confidence is returning, reflected in capital inflows, renewed project financing, and stronger private‑sector participation.

6) Our external reserves rose to a 7‑year high of about US47 billion dollars as of last month, providing over 10 months of import cover and a more substantial buffer against shocks.

8. These outcomes are not accidental or lucky. They are the consequence of our difficult policy choices. Our next objective is to deepen our gains in pursuit of enduring and inclusive prosperity.

9. Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Members, our 2025 budget implementation faced the realities of transition and competing execution demands. As of Q3 2025, we recorded:
• 18.6 trillion naira in revenue — representing 61% of our target; and
• 24.66 trillion naira in expenditure — representing 60% of our target.

10. Following the extension of the 2024 capital budget execution to December 2025, a total of 2.23 trillion naira was released for the implementation of 2024 capital projects as of June 2025.

11. While fiscal challenges persisted, the government met its key obligations. However, only 3.10 trillion naira — about 17.7% of the 2025 capital budget — was released as of Q3, reflecting the emphasis on completing priority 2024 capital projects during the transition period.

12. Let me be clear: 2026 will be a year of stronger discipline in budget execution. I have issued directives to the Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, the Honourable Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, the Accountant‑General of the Federation, and the Director‑General of the Budget Office of the Federation to ensure that the 2026 Budget is implemented strictly in line with the appropriated details and timelines.

13. We expect improved revenue performance through the new National Tax Acts and the ongoing reforms in the oil and gas sector — reforms designed not merely to raise revenue, but to drive transparency, efficiency, fairness, and long‑term value in our fiscal architecture.

14. I have also provided clear and direct guidance regarding Government‑Owned Enterprises. Heads of all agencies have been directed to meet their assigned revenue targets. To support this, we will deploy end‑to‑end digitisation of revenue mobilisation — standardised e‑collections, interoperable payment rails, automated reconciliation, data‑driven risk profiling, and real‑time performance dashboards — so leakages are sealed, compliance is verifiable, and remittances are prompt. These targets will form core components of performance evaluations and institutional scorecards. Nigeria can no longer afford leakages, inefficiencies, or underperformance in strategic agencies. Every institution must play its part.

15. Mr Chairman and fellow Nigerians, the 2026 Budget is guided by four clear objectives:
1) Consolidate macroeconomic stability;
2) Improve the business and investment environment;
3) Promote job‑rich growth and reduce poverty; and
4) Strengthen human capital development while protecting the vulnerable.

16. In short: we will spend with purpose, manage debt with discipline, and pursue broad-based, sustainable growth.

17. Distinguished Members, the 2026 Federal Budget is anchored on realism, prudence, and growth.

18. The key aggregates are as follows:
1) Expected total revenue is 34.33 trillion naira.
2) Projected total expenditure is 58.18 trillion naira, including 15.52 trillion naira for debt servicing.
3) Recurrent (non‑debt) expenditure is 15.25 trillion naira.
4) Capital expenditure will be 26.08 trillion.
5) The Budget deficit is expected to be 23.85 trillion naira, representing 4.28% of GDP.

19. These numbers are not mere accounting lines. They are a statement of national priorities. We remain firmly committed to fiscal sustainability, debt transparency, and value‑for‑money spending.

20. The 2026–2028 Medium‑Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper sets the parameters for this Budget. Our projections are based on:
1) a conservative crude oil benchmark of US64.85 dollars per barrel;
2) crude oil production of 1.84 million barrels per day; and
3) an average exchange rate of 1,400 naira to the US Dollar for the 2026 fiscal year.

21. We will continue to reduce waste, strengthen controls, and ensure that every naira borrowed or spent delivers measurable public value.

22. Our allocations reflect the Renewed Hope Agenda and the practical needs of Nigerians. Key sectoral provisions include:
1) Defence and security: 5.41 trillion naira
2) Infrastructure: 3.56 trillion naira
3) Education: 3.52 trillion naira
4) Health: 2.48 trillion naira

23. These priorities are interlinked. Without security, investment will not thrive. Without educated and healthy citizens, productivity will not rise. Without infrastructure, jobs and enterprises will not scale. This Budget is, therefore, designed to provide a single, coherent programme of national renewal.

A. National Security and Peacebuilding
24. National Security remains the foundation of development. The 2026 Budget strengthens support for:
• modernisation of the Armed Forces;
• intelligence‑driven policing and joint operations;
• border security and technology‑enabled surveillance; and
• community‑based peacebuilding and conflict prevention.

25. We will invest in security with clear accountability for outcomes — because security spending must deliver results. To secure our country, our priority will remain on increasing the fighting capability of our armed forces and other security agencies and boosting the effectiveness of our fighting forces with cutting-edge equipment and other hardware.

26. We will usher in a new era of criminal justice. We will show no mercy to those who commit or support acts of terrorism, banditry, kidnapping for ransom and other violent crimes.

27. Our administration is resetting the national security architecture and establishing a new national counterterrorism doctrine — a holistic redesign anchored on unified command, intelligence gathering, community stability, and counter – insurgency. This new doctrine will fundamentally change how we confront terrorism and other violent crimes.

28. Under this new architecture, any armed group or gun-wielding non-state actors operating outside state authority will be regarded as terrorists.

29. Bandits, militias, armed gangs, armed robbers, violent cults, forest-based armed groups and foreign-linked mercenaries will all be targeted. We will go after all those who perpetrate violence for political or sectarian ends, along with those who finance and facilitate their evil schemes.

B. Human Capital Development: Education and Health
30. No nation can grow beyond the quality of its people. The 2026 Budget strengthens investments in education, skills, healthcare, and social protection.

31. In education, we are expanding access to higher education through the Nigerian Education Loan Fund. Over seven hundred and eighty eight thousand students have been supported, in partnership with two hundred and twenty nine tertiary institutions nationwide.

32. In healthcare, I am pleased to highlight that investment in healthcare is 6 per cent of the total budget size, net of liabilities.

33. We also appreciate the support of international partners. Recent high‑level engagements with the Government of the United States have opened the door to over 500 million United States dollars for health interventions across Nigeria. We welcome this partnership and assure Nigerians that these resources will be deployed transparently and effectively.

C. Infrastructure and Economic Productivity
34. Across the nation, projects of all shapes and sizes are moving from vision to reality. These include transport and energy infrastructure, port modernisation, agricultural reforms, and strategic investments to unlock private capital.

35. We will take decisive steps to strengthen agricultural markets. Food security shall remain a national priority. The 2026 Budget focuses on input financing and mechanisation; irrigation and climate‑resilient agriculture; storage and processing; and agro‑value chains.

36. These measures will reduce post‑harvest losses, improve incomes for small holders, deepen agro‑industrialisation, and build a more resilient, diversified economy.
37. In 2026, the Bank of Agriculture plans to plant confidence back into our soil; mechanising through seven regional hubs, protecting harvests with fair prices and substantial reserves, providing affordable finance to millions of small holders and growing export value. Under the plan, Nigerian farmers will cultivate one million hectares, create hundreds of thousands of jobs, and prove that prosperity can rise through better use of our God given land.

D. Procurement
38. Starting in November last year, the government has embarked upon a comprehensive framework of procurement reforms. These reforms have enhanced efficiency and generated significant cost savings for the government, resulting in resulting in reduced processing times for Government contracts and better enforcement procedures directed against erring contractors and government officials.

39. Our Nigeria First Policy has been established to encourage self-sufficiency and sustainable growth within Nigeria by promoting domestic products and businesses. By mandating that all Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) consider Nigerian-made goods and local companies as their primary option, the policy aims to support local industries, create job opportunities, and reduce dependency on imported items. This bold new approach is expected to enhance the competitiveness of Nigerian enterprises, foster innovation, and ultimately contribute to the country’s overall economic development.

40. Distinguished Members and fellow Nigerians, the most significant budget is not the one we announce. It is the one we deliver.

41. Therefore, 2026 will be guided by three practical commitments:
1) Better revenue mobilisation through efficiency, transparency, and compliance.
2) Better spending by prioritising projects that can be completed, measured, and felt by citizens.
3) Better accountability through strengthening of procurement discipline, monitoring, and reporting.

42. We will build trust by matching our words with results, and our allocations with outcomes.

43. Distinguished Members of the National Assembly, fellow Nigerians, the 2026 Budget is not a budget of promises; it is a Budget of consolidation, renewed resilience and shared prosperity. It builds on the reforms of the past two and a half years, addresses emerging challenges, and sets a clear path towards a more secure, more competitive, more equitable, and more hopeful Nigeria.

44. I commend the people of this country for their understanding and resilience. My administration remains committed to easing the burdens of the transition to a more stable and prosperous nation. We promise to make sure that the benefits of reform reach households and communities across the Federation.

45. In united purpose between the Executive and the Legislature; and with the resilience of the Nigerian people, we will deliver the full promise of the Renewed Hope Agenda.

46. It is, therefore, with great pleasure that I lay before this distinguished Joint Session of the National Assembly; the 2026 Appropriation Bill of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, titled: “Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity”. I seek your partnership in charting the nation’s fiscal course for the coming year.

47. May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

48. Thank you.

Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR
President, Commander-in-Chief of The Armed Forces,
Federal Republic of Nigeria

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Chief Jerome Udoji: Architect of Nigeria’s Modern Civil Service

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A tribute to Chief Jerome Oputa Udoji, the civil servant, legal luminary, and traditional ruler who transformed Nigeria’s public administration.

Chief Jerome Oputa Udoji (1917–2010) was a distinguished Nigerian public servant, lawyer, businessman, and traditional ruler. Born on July 17, 1917, in Ozubulu, Anambra State, he would go on to become a transformative figure in Nigeria’s civil service and public administration. Widely regarded for his legal acumen, administrative foresight, and ethical leadership, Udoji’s contributions continue to shape governance in Nigeria.

Education and Early Career

Chief Udoji’s commitment to education laid the foundation for his remarkable career. He attended:

St Michael’s Catholic School, Ozubulu

St Charles Teacher’s Training Institute, Onitsha

Driven by a passion for learning, he proceeded to University of Cambridge, England (1945–1948), where he studied law and became one of the first Nigerians to graduate from this prestigious institution. He was subsequently called to the English Bar at Gray’s Inn, London.

Upon returning to Nigeria, Udoji embarked on a stellar career in public service, beginning as a third-class clerk in Western Nigeria. He steadily rose through the ranks:

Personal Assistant to the Provincial Secretary, Western Nigeria

Assistant District Officer, Ekiti Division (1948–1950)

District Officer, Egbado Division (1951–1953)

Permanent Secretary, Eastern Region Ministries of Health, Commerce, Finance, and Establishment (1955–1959)

Chief Secretary and Head of Eastern Nigeria Civil Service (1960–1966)

He briefly practiced law privately (1966–1968) and worked as a consultant for the Ford Foundation in Nairobi, Kenya.

The Udoji Award and Civil Service Reforms

The pinnacle of Chief Udoji’s career came in 1972, when General Yakubu Gowon appointed him Chairman of the Public Service Review Commission. The commission, famously known for the “Udoji Award”, undertook a comprehensive review of Nigeria’s civil service, introducing far-reaching reforms:

Salary Reforms: Recommended significant increases in civil servants’ salaries, implemented in 1974, dramatically improving spending power and morale.

Administrative Reorganisation: Advocated for a unified and integrated administrative structure, elimination of inefficiencies, and restructuring of redundant departments.

Training and Capacity Building: Introduced formal civil service training programmes to professionalize public administration.

Efficiency and Cost-Effectiveness: Emphasized accountability, elimination of waste, and streamlined governance processes.

The Udoji Award became a benchmark for modernizing public administration and enhancing civil service professionalism in Nigeria.

Business and Traditional Leadership

In addition to his civil service career, Chief Udoji was a successful businessman, engaging in consultancy and strategic advisory roles. He also held the traditional title of Igwe Ozuluoha I of Igboland, reflecting his standing and influence within his community.

Legacy

Chief Jerome Udoji passed away in 2010 at the age of 98, leaving a lasting legacy:

Recognized as a transformative civil servant whose reforms continue to influence Nigerian governance.

Remembered as a legal scholar and administrative strategist, combining Western education with deep understanding of Nigerian socio-cultural dynamics.

Honoured as a traditional ruler, bridging modern governance and indigenous leadership structures.

The Udoji Award remains a defining milestone in Nigeria’s civil service history, symbolizing the pursuit of efficiency, equity, and professionalism in public administration.

Visual Representation

The accompanying image captures Chief Jerome Oputa Udoji in the 1970s, reflecting his stature as a pioneering civil servant, lawyer, and public figure in Nigeria.

Sources

Udoji, J. O. Public Service and Administration in Nigeria (Government Press, Lagos, 1974)

Akinyele, R. Nigerian Civil Service Reforms: The Udoji Experience (University of Ibadan Press, 1990)

Ezeani, Chukwuma. Notable Nigerians in Public Service (Enugu Academic Press, 2005)

National Archives of Nigeria, Lagos & Enugu Records (1960–1975)

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PRESIDENT TINUBU CONGRATULATES VETERAN BROADCASTER, BISI OLATILO, ON HIS BIRTHDAY

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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu sends his warm congratulations to Chief Bisi Olatilo, veteran broadcaster, polyglot, and founder of Biscon Communications, on his 72nd birthday on December 20.

President Tinubu describes the celebrant, who still anchors the Bisi Olatilo show, as a media icon whose work continues to enrich national development.

President Tinubu acknowledges Olatilo’s pioneering role in broadcast journalism and his commitment to professionalism through Biscon Communications.

“Otunba Bisi, at 72, you have become an institution and a widely respected voice in Nigeria’s celebrity media circle, primarily through the Bisi Olatilo Show, which has transformed into a must-see item in social circles and a veritable source of enlightenment and mentorship.

“You are more than a broadcaster. Your role in the conservation and promotion of Nigerian arts and culture stands you tall as a true believer in the unity and socio- economic development of our dear nation. You are a true master of your trade”, President Tinubu says.

The President wishes the respected communicator good health, renewed strength, and many more years of fulfilment, as he continues to contribute his wealth of experience to the advancement of the Nigerian media industry.

Bayo Onanuga
Special Adviser to the President
(Information and Strategy)
December 20, 2025.

 

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Anthony Joshua Knocks Out Jake Paul in Sixth Round

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In a night that captivated the global sports world, British boxing icon Anthony Joshua delivered a commanding sixth‑round knockout of YouTuber‑turned‑boxer Jake Paul in a highly anticipated heavyweight clash at the Kaseya Center in Miami on December 19, 2025. The bout, streamed live to millions on Netflix, marked one of the most surreal and talked‑about events in modern combat sports, blending traditional pugilism with celebrity spectacle.

From the opening bell, the fight — billed as “Judgment Day” — carried enormous expectations. Joshua, a two‑time unified heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medalist, entered the ring as the overwhelming favorite despite more than a year out of active competition following a stoppage loss to Daniel Dubois in September 2024. Paul, the social media mogul whose unconventional boxing career has generated more headlines than wins, was seen as an intriguing yet risky opponent, a cruiserweight stepping up to face a seasoned heavyweight with significant advantages in size, experience and pedigree. The narrative was part David vs. Goliath, part circus, but the outcome was undoubtedly reaffirmation of boxing fundamentals.

The physical disparities were evident early. At the weigh‑in, Joshua tipped the scales at 243.4 pounds, nearly 30 pounds heavier than Paul, who weighed in at 216.6 pounds — a rare heavyweight outing for the American whose career has mostly been at cruiserweight. Standing six feet six inches tall with a longer reach, Joshua looked every bit the seasoned contender poised to reestablish his dominance. Paul, by contrast, sought to rely on speed, movement and unpredictability, a strategy that allowed him to avoid early confrontation.

The first four rounds unfolded in a way few anticipated. Joshua, methodical but visibly shaking off ring rust, struggled to impose his will while Paul employed a defensive game plan built around evasion and clinching. The crowd’s expectation for early fireworks dissipated as both fighters traded minimal offense, prompting boos and criticism from some spectators who felt the spectacle did not live up to the hype. Nevertheless, Joshua’s experience — and sustained pressure — began shaping the narrative as the fight progressed.

By the fifth round, momentum definitively shifted. Joshua began to land meaningful blows, culminating in two knockdowns as Paul’s energy reserves drained and his defensive tactics became increasingly untenable. Judges and fans alike sensed the fight reaching a turning point as the veteran Briton closed the distance with crisp combinations that rattled his opponent.

The decisive moment came early in the sixth. After dropping Paul again with a heavy right, Joshua pressed forward — his shots now landing with precision and power — prompting referee intervention and an emphatic stoppage at 1:31 of the round. The victory marked Joshua’s first knockout win since defeating Francis Ngannou in early 2024 and ended Paul’s bid to make a defining statement in his sporadic journey through professional boxing.

In the frenetic moments following the fight, Joshua offered measured respect to his defeated foe, acknowledging Paul’s resilience in lasting into the later rounds despite the physical toll. Paul, grimacing from the knockout blow, later revealed he believes he suffered a broken jaw but maintained a defiant spirit, expressing a desire to continue his boxing career after recovery and even pursue a world title.

The bout also reignited questions about the evolving nature of celebrity boxing — a phenomenon that has both expanded audiences and drawn criticism from purists. Observers on social media and discussion boards were quick to debate the legitimacy of the match, with some fans decrying the spectacle as a mismatched contest, while others applauded the drama and Joshua’s eventual assertion of superior skill. Regardless, the fight generated immense viewership, leveraging Netflix’s global streaming platform and bringing combat sports into mainstream entertainment in ways previously unparalleled.

For Joshua, the victory offers a potential springboard back into elite contention. Fresh off his knockout triumph, the Briton openly called for high‑profile future matchups, including the possibility of facing fellow heavyweight star Tyson Fury, whose social media rivalry with Joshua has been an ongoing subplot in the build‑up to the Miami showdown. With a professional record bolstered by 26 knockouts and a renewed sense of momentum, Joshua now stands poised to define the next chapter of his storied career.

For Paul, the defeat may represent a crossroads. Though he showed durability that surprised some critics, the physical and tactical challenges he faced against an elite heavyweight highlight the limitations of his transition from influencer to serious pugilist. However personal ambition and showmanship remain central to his brand, and Paul’s remarks post‑fight underscored a readiness to learn and return, even if at a more natural weight class.

As the boxing world digests the aftermath of “Judgment Day,” one truth endures: when elite skill meets massive spectacle, the sport’s appeal — and controversy — only grows stronger. Joshua’s knockout may have closed one chapter, but in the global arena of fighters, fans and media narratives alike, the story is far from over.

 

 

 

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