Nigeria’s micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) are losing an estimated ₦5 trillion to ₦10 trillion annually due to employee fraud and workplace corruption, the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) has revealed.
In a statement issued on Sunday and signed by its Chief Executive Officer, Muda Yusuf, the policy think-tank described occupational fraud as one of the most serious yet underreported threats confronting Nigeria’s entrepreneurial ecosystem.

‘Silent Drain’ on Businesses
According to CPPE, internal fraud has evolved beyond a routine management concern and now represents a significant economic risk capable of undermining business sustainability, investor confidence, and national growth.

The organisation identified common forms of employee-related corruption to include cash theft, payroll manipulation, procurement fraud, and inventory diversion—practices it said are eroding already thin profit margins within the MSME sector.
“Employee corruption and internal fraud have become a silent but significant drain on business sustainability and profitability,” the statement noted, adding that the cumulative annual losses run into trillions of naira.
MSMEs Vulnerable
CPPE explained that many small businesses operate with weak internal controls, informal accounting systems, and high-trust management structures, making them particularly vulnerable to financial misconduct.
“Employee corruption and occupational fraud constitute one of the largest hidden drains on Nigeria’s entrepreneurial economy,” the group stated.
Call for Coordinated Action
The think-tank stressed that addressing workplace corruption requires coordinated efforts from business owners, regulators, and policymakers, warning that safeguarding MSMEs is crucial to maintaining broader economic stability.
CPPE concluded that tackling internal fraud is not merely a managerial task but a strategic economic imperative necessary to protect Nigeria’s private sector and sustain long-term growth.







