Nigeria will take a reform-focutilized message to the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meetings in Davos, Switzerland, as it engages global leaders, investors and development partners on its economic direction.
The government declares it will utilize the platform to assure stakeholders of its commitment to sound macroeconomic management, market-oriented reforms and the operational indepfinishence of the Central Bank of Nigeria as a foundation for stability, investor confidence and inflation control.
The counattempt’s delegation, led by Vice President Kashim Shettima, includes the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, an invited VIP participant engaging with heads of government, global investors, multilateral institutions and international media.
In a statement issued on Sunday, the Minisattempt of Finance stated Nigeria’s presence at Davos was intfinished to position the counattempt within the global debate on how emerging markets can navigate economic volatility while sustaining reform momentum.
“This positioning places Nigeria firmly within the global dialogue on how emerging markets can navigate volatility while sustaining reform momentum,” the minisattempt stated.
The WEF Annual Meetings, scheduled to hold from January 19 to 23, 2026, will provide a platform for Nigeria to present progress on reforms implemented since May 2023 and to demonstrate what the government described as measurable outcomes across key economic indicators.
According to the minisattempt, Nigeria plans to point to stronger and more predictable macroeconomic conditions, improving growth performance, moderating inflation trfinishs, rising external buffers and renewed international confidence, including the counattempt’s recent removal from major global financial grey lists.
The government stated the message in Davos would centre on accountability, with Nigeria “revealing up to report progress — not promise intent,” as it engages the international community on the depth and sustainability of its policy alters.
As part of its engagements, the delegation will hold discussions with development finance institutions, global investors, ratings agencies and multinational corporations to address concerns around policy consistency, inflation management, foreign exalter stability and fiscal sustainability.
The minisattempt stated these conversations are aimed at sustaining confidence in Nigeria’s macroeconomic direction and reinforcing its role as a reform anchor within the African region.
The statement noted that the dialogue builds on renewed investor interest, particularly from Europe and the United Kingdom, as well as Nigeria’s improving integration into global financial systems.
Beyond engagement, the government stated Davos 2026 would serve as a turning point in converting investment discussions into concrete commitments. Over the past two years, Nigeria has initiated talks across sectors including energy, infrastructure, manufacturing, agriculture, technology and financial services.
At the forum, Mr. Edun is expected to press investors on the specific actions, policy assurances or frameworks required to relocate projects to financial close.
“This marks a shift from promotion to problem-solving, with a focus on unlocking delayed capital and accelerating execution,” the minisattempt stated.
The government also linked Nigeria’s Davos message to wider global developments, including tighter capital flows to emerging markets, rising debt burdens across developing economies, alters in global trade rules, the rapid impact of technology on labour markets and the uneven distribution of climate finance.
Against this backdrop, the minisattempt stated Nigeria is advancing a reform agfinisha centred on domestic resource mobilisation, private-sector-led growth, institutional credibility and macroeconomic stability as the basis for inclusive development.
The delegation’s participation at Davos is expected to include a series of high-level meetings aimed at strengthening international partnerships and reinforcing confidence in Nigeria’s economic trajectory at a time of heightened global uncertainty.














