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Nigeria vs South Africa: Nigeria Have The Biggest Road Networks in Africa? South Africa Built Rails Transport systems shape a nation’s economic future. In this episode of Solid Finance Podcast, we compare Nigeria’s road-dependent economy with South Africa’s rail-powered freight system and explain why this difference matters more than most people think. Nigeria has over 190,000 kilometres of roads, yet more than 90 percent of freight and passenger movement happens by road. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s rail network spans only about 3,500 to 3,800 kilometres and moves roughly 260,000 tonnes of freight annually. In contrast, South Africa operates nearly 21,000 kilometres of rail and transports over 100 million tonnes of freight every year. This imbalance increases transport costs, damages roads, fuels congestion, raises food prices, and contributes to inflation in Nigeria. In 2024 alone, thousands of road accidents highlighted the human cost of an overloaded road system. We also calculate how shifting just 30 percent of freight from road to rail could save Nigeria an estimated 144 billion naira annually while reducing fuel consumption, congestion, and maintenance costs. This video breaks down infrastructure, freight logistics, port integration, rail expansion, inflation impact, and economic structure. If you care about Nigeria’s economy, transport policy, and long-term growth strategy, this analysis is for you. Watch till the end and tell us, are you team road or team railway?