The Poverty Exit Plan aims to lift 40–50 million Nigerians out of multidimensional poverty within the next decade.
Over 600,000 students have benefited from the scheme, with nearly N75 billion disbursed.
The administration attracted over $50 billion in new Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) commitments and unlocked over $8 billion in new oil and gas investments.
Debt servicing dropped from 95% to 65% of revenue, freeing up resources for capital and social spending.
The industrial sector grew by 7.45%, driven by manufacturing and mining.
External reserves rose to $42.03 billion, the highest since 2019, boosting investor confidence.
Nigeria recorded five consecutive quarters of trade surpluses, with a 44.3% rise in trade surplus in Q2 2025.
Nigeria's GDP grew by 4.23% in Q2 2025, the fastest in four years, driven by sectors like agriculture, transportation, education, health, and manufacturing.