After three years of digital isolation, Nigerian banks have quietly resumed international transactions on naira-denominated debit cards, reconnecting millions of citizens to global platforms from Amazon to Netflix. This policy reversal, while seemingly technical, represents a profound shift in Nigeria's economic strategy—one that signals both growing confidence in the foreign exchange market and the fragile nature of the country's macroeconomic recovery. After three years of digital isolation, Nigerian banks have quietly resumed international transactions on naira-denominated debit cards, reconnecting millions of citizens to global platforms from Amazon to Netflix. This policy reversal, while seemingly technical, represents a profound shift in Nigeria's economic strategy—one that signals both growing confidence in the foreign exchange market and the fragile nature of the country's macroeconomic recovery.