Nigeria’s government is preoccupied. Policymakers are drafting reforms, politicians are negotiating power, and institutions are working to stabilize an economy hit by inflation, insecurity, and external shocks.
Yet, amidst these challenges, there are signs of progress, inflation has declined for two consecutive months, GDP growth is inching up, foreign investment is slowly returning, and fiscal policies are tightening leakages.
But beyond economic indicators, another crisis unfolds, predictable yet largely ignored until disaster strikes.
