This study evaluates the complex, sixty-five-year trajectory of economic relations between the United States and Nigeria, moving beyond traditional narratives of development assistance to analyze a persistent paradox: the coexistence of deep institutional cooperation with recurring diplomatic friction. Since establishing diplomatic ties in 1960, the economic relationship between the United States and Nigeria has been defined by a "strategic necessity" that often operates independently of political volatility. This study examines how bilateral ties survived the 1960s civil war, during which the U. S. refused arms sales to the federal government while providing humanitarian aid to Biafra, and the sanctions of the military era, only to emerge as a cornerstone of West African trade in the 21st century. Using historical mythological approach, the study identifies a significant shift in the nature of engagement: from the 20th-century "Oil-for-Aid" model to a 2025 landscape dominated by digital infrastructure, artificial intelligence, and private sector-led growth. While the U. S. remains Nigeria's largest foreign investor (7. 9 billion in 2024 FDI), the "paradox of friction" remains evident in 2025. This is characterized by: A dramatic 2025 reversal from a trade deficit to a 1. 79 billion U. S. surplus, driven by Nigeria's unexpected 1. 34 billion purchase of U. S. crude for its domestic refineries (Dangote Refinery) and a decline in U. S. demand for Nigerian exports. The imposition of new U. S. trade tariffs in early 2025 and the temporary expiration of AGOA, which nearly tripled export costs for Nigerian manufacturers Ultimately, the study argues that the relationship in 2025 is no longer "sentimental" but transactional. The study concludes that for Nigeria to maximize this diplomacy by 2030, it must transition from a consumer of U. S. technology to a rules-of-origin-compliant exporter.
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Nduonofit Okon Isana
University of Abuja
Ph.D Philip Uso Afaha
University of Abuja
University of Abuja
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Isana et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a2268f9763171746d5478a3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20532238