Manny Ita –
The Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) has announced the delisting of no fewer than 400,000 inactive companies from Nigeria’s business register, describing the move as part of a broader regulatory effort to sanitize and strengthen the integrity of the national corporate database.
The commission said the affected entities failed to comply with statutory requirements, including the filing of annual returns over prolonged periods, adding that their continued presence on the register undermined transparency and ease of doing business. A senior CAC official said the exercise was aimed at ensuring that “only active and compliant entities remain on the register,” noting that “this clean-up is necessary to restore confidence in Nigeria’s corporate information framework.”
According to the commission, the delisting does not permanently bar affected companies, as provisions exist for relisting once outstanding obligations are met. “Companies that regularise their status in line with the law can apply for restoration,” the official said, stressing that enforcement actions would continue as part of ongoing reforms.
The regulatory development comes as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) projected that Nigeria is on course to overtake Algeria as Africa’s third-largest economy by the end of 2026, citing the expected gains from ongoing fiscal and structural reforms.
In its latest assessment, the IMF pointed to policy adjustments, including revenue mobilisation efforts and changes in foreign exchange management, as key drivers that could improve macroeconomic stability and output growth. The fund noted that “recent fiscal reforms, if sustained, have the potential to significantly enhance Nigeria’s economic performance over the medium term.”
Economic analysts say the IMF projection underscores cautious optimism about Nigeria’s recovery prospects, while also highlighting the need for consistent policy implementation. One analyst said the outlook “reflects reform momentum, but translating projections into broad-based growth will depend on execution and institutional discipline.”
Together, the CAC’s enforcement action and the IMF’s economic outlook have reinforced ongoing debates about governance, reform credibility and the long-term trajectory of Africa’s most populous nation.

