Key Points
- Nigeria’s foreign reserves rose to $50.11 billion in June, the highest since 2009.
- CBN Governor Yemi Cardoso credits reforms, remittances and stronger oil and non-oil exports.
- Economists and workers want the gains channeled into jobs, fair pay and lower prices.
Nigerians are pressing the federal government to translate record foreign reserves into relief from the soaring cost of living. According to fresh Central Bank of Nigeria data, reserves climbed to $50.11 billion in June, the highest level since 2009.
The CBN says the buildup strengthens the country’s external position and steadies the naira. Moreover, it reflects stronger foreign exchange inflows and firmer macroeconomic fundamentals.
CBN Governor Yemi Cardoso called the reserves a critical buffer against external shocks and a sign of restored investor confidence. Specifically, he credited market-driven reforms, rising diaspora remittances, improved oil output and robust non-oil exports.
He added that the steady accumulation signals progress on the wider reform agenda. As a result, the bank views the milestone as proof that its policies are taking hold.
Strong numbers, rising doubts
He said the gross figure now exceeds $50 billion, giving Nigeria nearly a year of import cover. Notably, that level far surpasses the standard three-month international benchmark.
Therefore, the bank argues that the cushion gives policymakers more room to manage the exchange rate. Furthermore, analysts say stronger reserves can lift investor confidence and absorb future shocks.
Still, many Nigerians say the headline numbers mean little at the market. Indeed, stakeholders argue that families care more about food, housing, clothing and medicine they can barely afford.
According to economist Bayo Dada, real performance shows up in living standards rather than paper figures. Consequently, he asked whether people can eat, whether businesses are growing and whether jobs are appearing.
What Nigerians want instead
Beyond the headlines, the critics want concrete change. According to Dada, no statistical engineering can hide everyday hardship, because people live in the real economy, not in reports.
Policy analyst Sule Aliu agreed that reserves matter only when they fund real transformation. Instead of merely hoarding assets, he said, Nigeria should build a diversified and productive economy.
According to Aliu, the real challenge is not how much the country holds, but how well it uses that stability. Therefore, he urged officials to channel the gains toward citizens’ welfare.
Civil servant Ibrahim Muhammed put the frustration plainly. He noted that the minimum wage remains N70,000, while wage-award arrears stay unpaid and prices keep climbing.
Ultimately, the critics want the government to convert stability into jobs, fair pay and lower prices. As a result, they say rising reserves will matter only when households finally feel the difference.


