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Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust - Politics - Nairaland

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2017 Budget Is A Budget That Goes For More Debt -sanusi II / How We Were Pressured To Squander $18bn- Jonathan / How We Were Pressured To Squander $18bn Excess Crude Saving — Jonathan (2) (3) (4)

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Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 12:09pm On May 11, 2015
.Loan servicing costs FG $21bn

The federal government’s debt has risen by $18.40 billion (N3 trillion) in the last four years, analysis of a Debt Management Office document has revealed.

The government also spent about $21 billion to service both foreign and domestic debts from 2010 to 2014, the DMO data revealed.
However, financial experts told Daily Trust that the debts were incurred to pay salaries and meet overheads at a time the economy was not in a recession

According to the document, domestic debt consumed larger part of the amount spent by the government to pay interest on securitized debts.
The domestic debt servicing accumulated to $20.9 billion (N3.26 trillion) while the external debt servicing hit above a billion dollars.
In 2010, the federal government serviced the debt with $2.7 billion; 2011 with $3.78 billion; 2011 with $3.78 billion; 2012 with $4.92 billion; 2013 with $5.40 billion; and 2014 with $4.65 billion.

Records obtained from the Debt Management Office by Daily Trust revealed that Nigeria’s total public debt (external and securitized domestic debt of the federal government alone) has grown by $18.40 billion (N3 trillion) within the four years under focus.

In 2010, debt was $35.09 billion; 2011, $41.55 billion; 2012, $48.49 billion; 2013, $54.54 billion; and 2014, $53.49 billion. The current debt profile was a little higher than it was 10 years ago (2004) before Nigeria secured debt relief from the Paris Club.
In 2004, prior to the Paris Club debt relief, Nigeria’s overall debt stock was $46.2 billion which is $7.29 billion less than the current stocks.
In 2004, Daily Trust learnt that the external debt stood at US$35.9 billion while the stock of the domestic debt amounted to US$10.3 billion resulting in a total of about US$46.2 billion or 64.3% of GDP.

The document explained that the domestic debts are from securities such as Government Bonds, Treasury bills, Treasury Bonds, Development stock, Promissory Note. The DMO said the increment was due to the additional borrowing from both external and domestic sources.

On the increase in the external debt, DMO said it was due to additional disbursements of existing loans and issuance of Eurobonds. On the domestic side, the debt managers said it was due to part funding of budget deficits and refinancing of maturity obligations.

A Harvard trained economist who doesn’t want to be named said the high domestic debt accumulated due to the high interest paid on some of the securities issued by government.

He blamed the financial situation on finance ministry’s poor planning and reliance on bonds at very high yields just to finance recurrent expenditure.

He said the banks were no longer engaging in any productive ventures but relied on governments’ treasury bills and bonds which gave them at least 13 percent yield at ease.
According to him, there is no serious country that will give as high interest rate on its securities as that, except Nigeria.

“This is why government is spending so much in servicing debts through the nation’s budget and leaving capital expenditure with almost nothing. This is unsustainable; there is no serious economy that will rely on securities to meet its recurrent expenditure,” he added.
Niyi Ayoola-Daniels, president, International Institute of Petroleum, Energy Law and Policy (IIPELP), Abuja said spending such amount on servicing debts was unacceptable and not sustainable.

“Government should as matter of urgency take more immediate measures to collapse this figure to 1 trillion. One of the greatest challenges facing the budget office of the federation is how to rebase expenditure profile to suit revenue profile” he added.
According to Ayoola-Daniels it is wrong to use debt to finance consumption. “You may use debt to finance production but not consumptions,” he said.

A professor of Economics and Director General of the West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management (WAIFEM), Akpan Hogan Ekpo, said the high debt profile was worrisome particularly given the declining oil revenues, the major source of revenue for government.
“What is worrisome is that, the debts were incurred to pay salaries and meet overheads when the economy was not in a recession,” he said
He added that the rising domestic debt calls for a moratorium on borrowing to finance recurrent expenditure. “We need to know the status of infrastructural development which enjoyed intervention fund (debt) from government, among others.

“It is clear that the system had no concrete fiscal buffers. The system must drastically reduce wastages, block leakages and be innovative in raising revenue outside oil.”

“When we borrow to finance unviable projects, we are putting the future generation of Nigerians in debt. Let us not allow the future generation to abuse the current ones even when they are in their graves,” he said.

When contacted, the office of the Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo Iweala promised to give details on the debt management within the period but was unable to do so before Daily Trust went to press.

But in a publication titled: Clarifying Nigeria’s Debt Position by the minister last year obtained in the website of the Ministry, Okonjo-Iweala said in August 2006, after debt relief negotiation. Nigeria’s foreign and domestic debts amounted to US$3.5 billion and US$13.8 billion respectively – a total of US$17.3 billion or 11.8% of GDP.

“By August 2011, when I resumed for the second time as Finance Minister, the domestic debt stock had grown substantially to US$42.23 billion, while the external debt was still a modest US$5.67 billion. This implied a total debt stock of US$47.9 billion or 21% of GDP. Note that while the debt stock grew, our national income also grew so that debt to GDP ratio (the parameter used globally to measure a country’s debt sustainability) remains modest and manageable.”

But according to Professor Ekpo, it is conventional to borrow to finance capital expenditure in other to stimulate growth. The golden rule suggests that such borrowing should not exceed 10 percent of the total cost, he said, adding that debt /revenue ratio would have made more sense than the debt/GDP ratio.


http://dailytrust.com.ng/daily/top-stories/54386-nigeria-s-debt-rises-by-18bn-in-4-years

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Twaci(f): 12:16pm On May 11, 2015
N3 trillion?! shocked shocked

That's one huge debt!

6 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 12:17pm On May 11, 2015
Abeg PDP driver "owa oh." Stop me at May 29th Junction. Let me enter APC shuttle. You've been driving roughly for four years. My CHANGE biko. My mama say make I dey careful................................................................................................YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING LIKE ONE CHANCE TO ME.

121 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 12:18pm On May 11, 2015
Twaci:
N3 trillion?! shocked shocked

That's one huge debt!

Miss Nairaland
Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Twaci(f): 12:21pm On May 11, 2015
OilGas:


Miss Nairaland
Hello OilGas! What's popping? smiley

1 Like

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by GBTYO: 12:23pm On May 11, 2015
Twaci:
Hello OilGas! What's popping? smiley

why are you spamming this section with your vanity appeal for votes?

33 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 12:24pm On May 11, 2015
tophaz

abi


tohpahz
Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by theV0ice: 12:25pm On May 11, 2015
What a transformation of our debt profile?

None of these bad news faze me anymore.......let this govt just pack up and go. We obviously have to start afresh on a lot of fronts and in a lot of sectors.

I wish them all, everything they've done to this country all through their reign

19 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Twaci(f): 12:26pm On May 11, 2015
GBTYO:


why are you spamming this section with your vanity appeal for votes?
I don't remember posting anything that has to do with that embarassed

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by GBTYO: 12:27pm On May 11, 2015
Twaci:
I don't remember posting anything that has to do with that embarassed


Then what the hell is this ?

TEAMTWACI:
Rip the dead,i pray God grant his family the fortitude to bear the lost


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1 Like

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by tohpahz(f): 12:29pm On May 11, 2015
olaxco2f:
tophaz

abi


tohpahz

U called me..

1 Like

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 12:29pm On May 11, 2015
Miss Nairaland?




tohpahz:


U called me..




grin grin grin

1 Like

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by tohpahz(f): 12:31pm On May 11, 2015
olaxco2f:
Miss Nairaland?









grin grin grin

Lol cheesy cheesy

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Twaci(f): 12:33pm On May 11, 2015
GBTYO:



Then what the hell is this ?


Oh that! cheesy that's a campaign message. You can ignore it if you don't like it, sorry. Have a nice day though.

5 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by socialmediaman: 12:35pm On May 11, 2015
Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat? Even with oil boom in GEJ's government? Economy was not in a recession and the government was borrowing to pay salaries?? No wonder GEJ has been talking about Persecution on "certain" decisions he took" so this is it huh??

#GEJWhereIsMyShare

25 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by AhmedMustapha(m): 12:39pm On May 11, 2015
If only the money gotten was spent wisely

1 Like

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by PassingShot(m): 1:36pm On May 11, 2015
"In 2004, prior to the Paris Club debt relief, Nigeria’s overall debt stock was $46.2 billion which is $7.29 billion less than the current stocks.

In 2004, Daily Trust learnt that the external debt stood at US$35.9 billion while the stock of the domestic debt amounted to US$10.3 billion resulting in a total of about US$46.2 billion or 64.3% of GDP."


The summary is that Nigeria is worse off than we were ten years ago (2004) despite unprecedented earnings between 2010 and 2015.

And some eediots aka TANoids will cry at the mention of GMB probing the outgoing criminals!

If they are left unprobed, is it me and my family that didn't "eat" from their loots you want GMB to probe?

That woman with puff-puff cheeks must first be restricted from jetting out. The probing must begin with her.

cool cool cool

63 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 2:01pm On May 11, 2015
chei!!! Ndia egbu o ndia undecided

It'll never be well with JonaDumb, madam-Gele,"Eye-rene" aka froggy and all the people that have put us in this mess...

21 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by chamboy(m): 2:01pm On May 11, 2015
A Nobel Price For GEJ

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Penuelseun(m): 2:02pm On May 11, 2015
Chai, Jonathan don dupe us finish o, $18b in just four years? Buhari pls do something when u get there. You can just have mercy on him by hanging him by his scrotum.

18 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 2:03pm On May 11, 2015
story for the gods of Akiolu
Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 2:03pm On May 11, 2015
PDP - Power to the riches shocked

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Nobody: 2:03pm On May 11, 2015
Borrowing in the midst of plenty.

5 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by tobtap: 2:04pm On May 11, 2015
jj
Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by joseph1832(m): 2:04pm On May 11, 2015
Twaci:
N3 trillion?! shocked shocked

That's one huge debt!
All thanks to the bad leadership and tutelage of Badluck Jona and madam Okon Ewure!.

Imagine if Oga Jona had won the presidential elections, by 2019 the debt will be like 9 trillion.

17 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by authority2006(m): 2:06pm On May 11, 2015
Hmmm, this government is not the type of government Nigerians deserve. May we never have this type government in Nigeria.

23 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Dee60: 2:06pm On May 11, 2015
How would NOI explain this?

What has the debt been used for?

What about the oil windfall? Where has it been kept? Why borrow so much in a season of bumper harvest?
Suddenly Naira is now sold at 224 to the dollar?

What kind of Economics is this?

I smell plenty of Wuruwuru here?

The government should admit their errors and start ti retrun some of the 'missing' or 'unaccounted for' billions!

No light, no diesel, no petrol, no road.....

What kinda of wuruwuru is this o?

Yet, they claim they have created 4 million jobs in 4 years!

16 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by moscobabs(m): 2:07pm On May 11, 2015
GEJ was born to destroy Nigeria

20 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by clemz88(m): 2:08pm On May 11, 2015
Hmm that's the work of jonah n his fellow polithieftians. Always shouting transformation. Bur we aint seeing anything tranzformed . Instead they av stolen a lot and made nigeria debtors. Deris God ooooo

11 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by spako4(m): 2:08pm On May 11, 2015
Prodigal son!

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by Twaci(f): 2:08pm On May 11, 2015
joseph1832:
All thanks to the bad leadership and tutelage of Badluck Jona and madam Okon Ewure!.

Imagine if Oga Jona had won the presidential elections, by 2019 the debt will be like 9 trillion.
cheesy But still, who knows?

BTW what does ur signature mean?
Re: Nigeria No More Debt Free: Federal Debt Up By $18bn Under 4 Years- Daily Trust by mekzyjoe(m): 2:09pm On May 11, 2015
SMH FOR DIS COUNTRY... angry angry..Vote for Trypa for Miss Nairaland 2015..www.nairaland.com/trypa

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