Manny Ita –
Companies that transitioned to local raw material sourcing in 2025 are reporting significantly stronger financial performance, with new industry data indicating that firms relying on domestic inputs recorded nearly double profit after tax compared to businesses still dependent on imported materials.
The report, compiled by manufacturing and business analysts monitoring Nigeria’s industrial performance, attributes the improved profitability to reduced exposure to foreign exchange volatility, lower logistics costs and shorter production cycles. Analysts noted that the sustained depreciation of the naira and rising global shipping expenses have continued to erode margins for import-dependent manufacturers.
According to stakeholders within the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, companies that aggressively adopted backward integration strategies and local supply chains were better positioned to stabilise operating costs throughout 2025. “Local sourcing has moved from being a patriotic option to becoming a survival strategy,” a senior industry representative said while commenting on the findings.
The report revealed that sectors such as food processing, construction materials, packaging and agro-allied manufacturing recorded the most noticeable gains, largely due to increased utilisation of locally available agricultural produce and mineral resources. Firms sourcing domestically were said to have benefited from predictable pricing structures and improved supply reliability compared to import-reliant competitors facing port congestion and fluctuating exchange rates.
Economic analysts linked the trend to ongoing policy advocacy encouraging import substitution and domestic value addition across key industries. Experts noted that businesses investing in local supplier development, farmer partnerships and indigenous processing capacity were able to retain greater value within the local economy while strengthening profitability.
A business consultant involved in the study stated that “companies that redesigned their supply chains around Nigerian inputs saw immediate savings on foreign exchange exposure, and those savings translated directly into improved profit after tax.”
However, the report also identified persistent challenges including inconsistent power supply, infrastructure gaps and quality standardisation issues that continue to limit full-scale adoption of local sourcing among some manufacturers. Despite these constraints, analysts projected that more firms are likely to accelerate the transition in 2026 as import costs remain elevated.
Industry observers say the emerging profitability gap between locally anchored manufacturers and import-dependent firms may reshape corporate strategy across Nigeria’s private sector, reinforcing domestic production as a key pathway toward industrial resilience and long-term economic sustainability.
