By Segun Otokiti
WorldStage Nigeria’s Macroeconomic Outlook 2026– Demand and Trade Dynamics: As Nigeria’s education sector was defined by a struggle between ambitious policy reforms and systemic instability caused by insecurity and funding gaps in 2025, the demand and trade dynamics for 2026 will be shaped by increasing adoption of digital technologies, including AI-driven tools, online learning platforms, and educational apps that are transforming teaching and administration.
There is also the growing focus on skills-based learning, vocational training, and industry-linked education to address youth unemployment; rising demand for quality education, particularly in STEM subjects, is driving growth in private institutions and international partnerships; and government initiatives, such as the 12-4 education policy and NITDA’s 3MTT program, aim to improve education accessibility and relevance.
The education market is expected to grow from the projected $5.2 billion in 2023, with a rate of 3.8 percent in 2024, driven by population expansion and increasing demand for quality education.
Investment and Funding
While the government significantly increased nominal spending in recent years, experts described the overall performance as subpar due to poor execution and persistent social challenges.
As the sector is expected to receive significant funding in 2026, with the federal government allocating ₦3.52 trillion, representing about 6.1 percent of the total budget, it is still short of the UNESCO-recommended 15-20 percent benchmark, with the actual funding needed estimated at between ₦8.7 trillion and ₦11.6 trillion.
Some states have made notable funding commitments to education. While Anambra allocated 46.9 percent of its ₦757 billion budget to education, Enugu allocated 33 percent. Other states such as Akwa Ibom and Imo allocated relatively lower at 2.27 percent and 4.24 percent respectively.
Education funding is expected to address pressing issues like infrastructure development, including classrooms and digital platforms, teacher training and welfare, STEM education and vocational training, and low enrollment rates, particularly in rural areas with 18 million classified as out-of-school children.
The Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) which faced technical hurdles during its 2024–2025 rollout is expected to reach a more stable “consolidation phase” in 2026. Additionally, the Aliko Dangote Education Support Initiative will begin its primary rollout in 2026 with ₦100 billion, aiming to support 45,000 new students annually, eventually reaching 1.3 million beneficiaries across all 774 local governments.
The EdTech market is forecast to grow from $159.6 million in 2025 to roughly $185–200 million by the end of 2026, driven by higher smartphone penetration and a shift toward hybrid university models.
Starting in 2026, a new federal directive mandates that all vice-chancellors and rectors should publish detailed financial and operational data on school websites to increase transparency.
Government Reforms
Government reforms in the sector aiming to improve access, quality, and relevance that are expected to have noticeable impacts in 2026 include: the EduRevamp, a nationwide Continuous Professional Development programme for teachers, focusing on modernizing teacher training and linking performance-based incentives to measurable classroom outcomes; the Basic Education Transformation Agenda (BETA) which aims to boost enrollment and enhance learning outcomes, with conditional cash transfers to mothers and coverage of school costs for vulnerable populations; STEMM Nigeria Agenda- Focuses on Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, and Medical Sciences, with a ₦50 million grant for innovative undergraduate projects; Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) overhaul, with free tuition, feeding, accommodation, and monthly stipends for students in federal and state technical colleges; Digital Transformation- Coding and ICT now compulsory from primary to senior secondary levels, with partnerships with companies like AWS to introduce cloud computing and machine learning skills; and Examination Integrity Reforms, computer-based testing, enhanced biometric verification, and the introduction of Examination Learner Identity Number (ELIN) to track exam participation; System Restructuring- Transitioning to a 12-year compulsory basic education model, replacing the old segmented 6-3-3-4 structure; Higher Education Stability- In December 2024/2025, the government signed a renegotiated agreement with ASUU, ending a 16-year impasse over service conditions.
A seven-year moratorium on establishing new federal universities was also introduced to prevent further resource thinning.
A major curriculum overhaul featuring 15 new vocational trades (e.g., Robotics, Solar PV Installation) unveiled by the government in 2025 is to become the standard in 2026 for external examinations like WAEC and NECO, with some previous subjects like Computer Studies being integrated or removed.
The goals of these reforms are to increase literacy rate from 62 percent to 80 percent by 2030; improve education infrastructure, including renovation of Federal Unity Colleges and modernization of technical colleges; and enhance teacher welfare and professional development.
Challenges
Insufficient funding, inadequate infrastructure, and poor teacher training hindering education quality remain the most serious challenges facing education in Nigeria.
There is also the high rates of out-of-school children, particularly in northern regions, and limited access to quality education in rural areas while digital divide and limited internet access constraining technology adoption will not disappear in the short term.
Government would be expected to put measure in place to avoid the technical failures as experienced in 2025 when both JAMB and WAEC experienced major technical “glitches” that forced result reviews and, in some cases, fresh examinations for hundreds of thousands of candidates.
On insecurity, school abductions returned in late 2025, with over 300 pupils kidnapped in Niger and Kebbi states, leading to the closure of 47 “Unity Schools” as a safety precaution. It is unwelcome development that reflects the general state of the nation, which only government can address.
On infrastructure and personnel, public schools continue to suffer from a shortage of over 5,000 teachers and decaying facilities, which critics argued were not addressed by the increased budget. However, expectation is high that 2026 will mark a shift from policy introduction and experimentation to implementation and consolidation, particularly regarding curriculum and funding models.
There is also the possibility of a return of ASUU strike in 2026. Despite a landmark 40 percent salary increase agreement signed in late 2025, labor unions remain “unimpressed” with general welfare, suggesting continued volatility in 2026.
Also there seems to be no quick fix for the Out-of-School Crisis as Nigeria enters 2026 with an estimated 18.3 million out-of-school children, the highest globally, with over 70 percent concentrated in the northern regions.
Nevertheless, 2026 is being assessed as a pivotal year for Nigeria’s education sector, characterized by a transition from “stabilization” to “value management” and “results-driven” growth. While funding and structural reforms remain central, the outlook is a mix of high digital ambition and persistent foundational challenges.
Experts anticipate a move away from merely securing funds toward ensuring “value management.” The goal is to make every invested naira deliver measurable results, specifically targeting the national literacy and numeracy crisis, which currently leaves nearly 75 percent of basic school students in “learning poverty.”
Opportunities
Opportunities would be expected from Data-Driven Oversight, Technological & Digital Transformation, Examination Integrity, EdTech Boom, Curriculum Integration, Technical & Vocational Training among others.
Data-Driven Oversight will entail implementation of digital attendance and real-time performance monitoring for both students and teachers.
Institutional Transparency: A 2025 federal directive mandates tertiary institutions to publish detailed operational and financial data on their websites to restore public trust.
Technological & Digital Transformation is expected to be the sector’s primary engine for resilience.
The EdTech boom is inevitable as online education market is projected to reach approximately $185–$200 million by the end of 2026, driven by a 15 percent–20 percent annual growth rate.
Curriculum Integration will accommodate coding and ICT which are now compulsory from primary to senior secondary levels.
Examination Integrity will require transitioning major exams like WAEC and NECO to full computer-based testing (CBT) with biometric verification to curb malpractice.
Focus on Technical & Vocational Training (TVET) will address a decisive pivot toward “competency over certificates” to address youth unemployment.
Tuition-Free Vocational Education is a welcome development through new policies that offer tuition-free admission to Federal Technical Colleges.
Industry Alignment is also welcome with reforms aim to partner the private sector to embed apprenticeship models and align training with labor market needs.
Polytechnic reforms are long awaited with amendments that allow polytechnics to award bachelor’s degrees to increase their relevance.
ConclusionThe year 2026 is considered a “defining year” for Nigerian education, moving from survival to value management. To ensure that the increased budget actually translates into better learning outcomes, the success of the year will depend on balancing the aggressive push for digitalization with the fundamental need for safer schools and better-trained teachers.
*Extract from WorldStage Nigeria’s Macroeconomic Outlook 2026.




































































