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Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria’s Total Public Debt Jumps By 15.64% To ₦33.107 Trillion – DMO / Investment In Nigeria Rises By 75% In Q1, 2021 / 13.5m Nigerians Voted Without PVC In 2015 – 75% In States Won By Buhari - Cable (2) (3) (4)

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Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by adenigga(m): 4:25am On Sep 15, 2023
•How CBN loans to FG, new debts, promissory notes raise public debt by N37tn between April and June

•Tinubu’s reforms will improve debt sustainability, DMO assures Nigerians as latest figure overshoots agency projection by N10tn

The Debt Management Office has said Nigeria’s total public debt hit N87.38tn at the end of the second quarter of 2023.

The figure represents an increase of 75.29 per cent or N37.53tn compared to N49.85tn recorded at the end of March 2023.


The DMO in a report on Thursday said the debt includes the N22.71tn Ways and Means Advances of the Central Bank of Nigeria to the Federal Government.

The DMO stated, “Nigeria’s total public debt stock as at June 30, 2023, was N87.38tn ($113.42bn). It comprises the total domestic and external debts of the Federal Government of Nigeria, the thirty-six states, and the Federal Capital Territory.

“The major addition to the Public Debt Stock was the inclusion of the N22.712tn securitized FGN’s Ways and Means Advances.”

The statement also noted that other additions to the debt stock were new borrowings by the Federal Government and the sub-nationals from local and external sources.

It added, “The reforms already introduced by the present administration and those that may emerge from the recommendations of the Fiscal Reform and Tax Policies Committee, are expected to impact debt strategy and improve debt sustainability.”

The DMO had earlier projected that Nigeria’s public debt burden may hit N77tn following the National Assembly’s approval of the request by former President Muhammadu Buhari to restructure the CBN’s Ways and Means Advances.

The Ways and Means Advances is a loan facility through which the CBN finances the shortfalls in the government’s budget.

The Director-General of the DMO, Patience Oniha, during a public presentation of the 2023 budget organised by the former Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Dr Zainab Ahmed, noted that the debt would be N70tn without N5tn new borrowing and N2tn promissory notes.

However, the latest data showed that the current debt stock of N87.38tn exceeded the DMO’s projection by N10.38tn.

Further breakdown showed that Nigeria has a total domestic debt of N54.13tn and total external debt of N33.25tn.

While the domestic debt makes up 61.95 per cent of total debt, the external makes up 38.05 per cent.

The PUNCH also observed that there was a significant increase in both domestic and external debt within three months.

The domestic debt rose by 79.18 per cent from N30.21tn while the external debt rose by 69.28 per cent from N19.64tn in Q1 2023.

In its 2022 Debt Sustainability Analysis Report, the DMO warned that the Federal Government’s projected revenue of N10tn for 2023 could not support fresh borrowings.

According to the office, the projected government’s debt service-to-revenue ratio of 73.5 per cent for 2023 is high and a threat to debt sustainability.

It noted that the government’s current revenue profile could not support higher levels of borrowing.

In a report titled, ‘Report of the Annual National Market Access Country Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA),’ the debt office said, “The projected FGN Debt Service-to-Revenue ratio at 73.5 per cent for 2023 is high and a threat to debt sustainability.

“It means that the revenue profile cannot support higher levels of borrowing. Attaining a sustainable FGN Debt Service-to-Revenue ratio would require an increase of FGN Revenue from N10.49tn projected in the 2023 Budget to about N15.5tn.”

DMO stated that the government must pay attention to revenue generation by implementing far-reaching revenue mobilisation initiatives and reforms including the Strategic Revenue Growth Initiatives and all its pillars with a view to raising the country’s tax revenue to GDP ratio from about 7 per cent to that of its peer.

The Federal Government would be unable to borrow a lot as it nears its self-imposed debt limit of 40 per cent, the DMO said.

To reduce borrowing and budget deficit, DMO stated that the government should encourage the private sector to fund some of the capital projects that were being financed from borrowing through the public-private partnership schemes.

It added that the Federal Government can reduce borrowing through the privatisation and/or sale of Government assets.

Over the years, Nigeria’s low revenue generation has pushed the government to more borrowing.

However, President Bola Tinubu recently expressed his administration’s commitment to break the cycle of overreliance on borrowing for public spending, and the resultant burden of debt servicing it places on management of limited government revenues.


Inaugurating the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms, chaired by Taiwo Oyedele, the President charged the committee to improve the country’s revenue profile and business environment.

Ways and Means

According to a Monetary Policy Committee member, Adeola Adenikinju, regarding the fiscal sector, both the government revenue and expenditure underperformed between January and May 2023.

In his personal statement released by the Central Bank at the last MPC meeting, he said the FG retained revenue stood at N1.67tn, lower than the pro-rata target of N1.97tn, which was due to the underperformance of FAAC receipts, gross independent revenue.

He said, “In the same vein, total FGN expenditure as of May 2023, was N4.77tn, 27.8 per cent lower than the budget estimate of N6.61tn. The shortfall came mainly from allocation for debt service, interest on Ways and Means, and capital expenditure.”

However, he added that the rise in FAAC overtime would help in managing the recourse of the FG and sub-national units on debts to finance government activities.

“This would also reduce Ways and Means finance and eventually reduce inflationary pressures from the monetary side,” he said.

Naira devaluation

The Deputy-President of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Gabriel Idahosa, blamed the devaluation of the naira as a major factor that increased the public debt, in naira terms.

He further stated that the new administration might have also inherited undisclosed debts which have accumulated to raise the figure to N87tn by the second quarter of the year.

He said, “The foreign exchange conversion will easily move the debt from N37tn to about N64tn. So, before the convergence, the rate was about N460. Now the CBN rate is about N800. So, that is almost double. So, it is not really mysterious.

“The only thing is that there is still a gap, it shouldn’t be up to N87tn unless additional debt was taken. It could be that some debts were not captured until now that the new government is opening the all the books.”

Similarly, a professor of Economics at the Olabisi Onabanjo University, Sheriffdeen Tella, cited the floating of the naira as the major factor that has caused the significant increase in Nigeria’s total debt.

Tella said, “You see, the naira depreciated seriously in the second quarter. So, that depreciation would have been used to calculate the debt. The domestic borrowing also increased because of the borrowing from the central bank to pay up debts on subsidy.

“The government was borrowing to pay for subsidy and that subsidy was steadily increasing. If you convert it to dollars, it won’t be so much, but because naira has depreciated, by the time you do the multiplication, it will increase significantly in naira terms.”

Revenue challenges

An economic expert and a former Assistant Head of Research at the CBN, Prof. Jonathan Aremu, said there was nothing wrong with debt but stressed the need to examine the reasons the debts were being incurred.

He said, “Like I used to say, there is nothing wrong in borrowing. Borrowing is divided into two, when you borrow to finance the budget that is productive and boosts economic growth, that is good. If it is borrowing to finance infrastructure, then we have productivity in the economy. But when you borrow for dead weights, i.e., to say it doesn’t have productive uses, that is where the question arises. Any borrowing that is meant for domestic consumption, not investment is a tax on the incoming generation and is not a sustainable borrowing.”

He noted that the country appears to be borrowing for the present population to be able to feed themselves, leaving the repayment to future generations.

Aremu highlighted, “The money borrowed by the government from the CBN must be paid back within a year, that is why they call it Ways and Means. It is the way and means in which the government can use to augment its expense. It shouldn’t be the primary thing that you use to surcharge the future generation.”

He further stated that the country’s high debt would affect whatever gains from subsidy. Aremu added, “The money we are paying in terms of capital and obviously the repayment of interests will affect whatever gain we are gaining from other sectors.”

Speaking further, MPC member, Adenikinju, noted that while debt is an issue, work needs to be done in raising the country’s revenue.

He said, “This shows that we need to address our revenue challenges. Debt is an issue if you do not have adequate revenue. Therefore it is important that the government sees how it can work on revenue to service this debt and at the same time lay sustainable economic growth for this country.”

He stated that with some of the recent measures of the government, such as fuel subsidy removal, addressing the exchange rate issue and setting up a tax reform committee, would help the country grow its revenue base.

Adenikinju further advised, “In addition to raising revenue, we need to make sure that we do not incur more debt to the one that we have, except we have an assurance that the debt will lead to economic growth and generate revenue.

“The issue of cost of governance has been raised and these are things that the government has to look into. It needs to be addressed. The good thing about our debt is that most of them are owed to multi-lateral bodies and the repayments are spread over a long period of time. Also, the CBN debt has been securitised allowing repayment to be over a period of time too. So, yes, we have debt, but the structure of the debt will not necessarily constitute an issue.”

He added that the country would have been in more problem if the bulk of its debt were commercial.

Source: https://punchng.com/Nigerias-debt-jumps-by-75%-in-three-months-hits-N87tn

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Zupay: 4:28am On Sep 15, 2023
In Mr. Macaroni's voice, Nigeria is doing well under APC.

Where is boda FreeStuffsNG, he should give APC free advice. cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy

109 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by TemplarLandry: 4:29am On Sep 15, 2023
cool

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by AntiWailer: 4:41am On Sep 15, 2023
Majorly caused by the floating of Naira.

If you owe 1M dollars in April, - you are owing 460 Million Naira.


Now without doing anything or even adding interest, you are now automatically owing 800 Million Naira.

Also.
“The government was borrowing to pay for subsidy and that subsidy was steadily increasing. If you convert it to dollars, it won’t be so much, but because naira has depreciated, by the time you do the multiplication, it will increase significantly in naira terms.”

Another reasons why subsidy must go no matter the pain.

Add Ways and Means Advances of the Central Bank of Nigeria to the Federal Government usually used to fund an ill prepared budget.

33 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by OkpaNsukkaisBae(m): 4:46am On Sep 15, 2023
But they said BAT is now saving funds thanks to excess revenue from fuel subsidy removal. Why are they still borrowing money? Government of propaganda.

172 Likes 13 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by ican2020: 4:47am On Sep 15, 2023
The country’s handlers are highly incompetent and clueless

100 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by gaby(m): 4:49am On Sep 15, 2023
Na so....

We are hitting the ground crawling and sinking gradually...

93 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Armstrong34(m): 5:00am On Sep 15, 2023
…. common that’s not good enough … when there is always chance for improvement 😕😕😕 Why don’t we aim higher to make it N200Trillion

47 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Olawumi1032(f): 5:00am On Sep 15, 2023
But why

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by lilkech(m): 5:00am On Sep 15, 2023
lol erm sorry, lemme quickly do some small simple calculations here because unlike our commander in chief I actually have my accountancy certificate and it's class, grade or honours has never been in any dispute . . .

Further breakdown showed that Nigeria has a total domestic debt of N54.13tn and total external debt of N33.25tn all incured within the past 3 calender months till today

So therefore . . .

July - August - September = 31 + 31 + 30 = 92 days
Total debt (internal & external) = N54.13tn + N33.25tn = N87.38tn

National debt accrued daily = N87.38tn ÷ 92 days = N949,782,608,696

So my fellow country people, what this thread is trying to tell us is that, for the past 92 days, Nigeria as a country has been accumulating a daily debt burden of Nine hundred and forty-nine billion, seven hundred and eighty-two million, six hundred and eight thousand six hundred and ninety-six naira ONLY (emphasis on the ONLY at the end of that string letting you know there is no KOBO value in that figure)

EVERY - SINGLE - DAY or EVERY - 24 - HOURS shocked

and you're telling me . . .

and I'm telling my children . . .

Nigeria will make it
Which president can handle it?

Dead bones shall rise again
Which imam or pastor can do it?

Hoooooo Laaawd Have Meesssiii shocked

modified
All of you apc goons correcting the timelines for me should keep quiet, isn't the values as at today not worse than my calculations show up there? What are you even trying to tell me to do? Inflate the figures further so my calculator will be writing

ERROR - ERROR - ERROR angry

54 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by oluwaseunamos33(m): 5:00am On Sep 15, 2023
Hmmm. May Almighty God safe this country from debt ijn.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Siberia01(m): 5:00am On Sep 15, 2023
cool
I don't give a Fucck
Anything wey happen make him happen

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by ValarDoharis: 5:01am On Sep 15, 2023
Borrowing but deceiving the citizens that they saved trillions from subsidy removal

66 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Orathird: 5:03am On Sep 15, 2023
Hmm


They should use the subsidy money to clear the debt.

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by EmmaLege: 5:03am On Sep 15, 2023
How 😳
Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Macphenson: 5:07am On Sep 15, 2023
kk
Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Earthquakes: 5:09am On Sep 15, 2023
Bambialla tinubu on the beat grin grin

25 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Houseofglam7(f): 5:12am On Sep 15, 2023
Brilliant!!!!!

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Whalis: 5:17am On Sep 15, 2023
How much did Bullhari borrow that we have been paying since four months of Tinubu and it is still increasing instead of reducing?
Fuel subsidy removal was to have enough money to pay debt.

10 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Brek: 5:17am On Sep 15, 2023
Chai grin

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by naijaadvance: 5:18am On Sep 15, 2023
Naijaadvance.com.ng
Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by edogu(m): 5:22am On Sep 15, 2023
The previous administration including some of the past governors really dealt with this country.

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Achor1111(m): 5:23am On Sep 15, 2023
Jagaban is doing well.
Dumb defenders, will defend this one too

32 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Edu3Again: 5:24am On Sep 15, 2023
Ebola is working grin
Not surprised we have a druglord as president.
Chochovini:
Tinibu is doing a great job. Interesting!
Govt of propaganda promoted by paid propagandists. Nonesense.
We are watching, let‘s see how it goes.
Achor1111:
Jagaban is doing well.
Dumb defenders, will defend this one too
I tell you angry

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Chochovini: 5:26am On Sep 15, 2023
Tinibu is doing a great job. Interesting! Govt of propaganda promoted by paid propagandists. Nonesense. We are watching, let‘s see how it goes.

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by PHAYOL81: 5:27am On Sep 15, 2023
See people posting without reading the text. They just wann rush to put a blame on someone

prettyvirgin:


It is u that didn't read before posting. Are u so daft and dumb to try to defend what is on ground? I swear all of u that support the coming of this govt will suffer it but we that never supported it will not suffer it because we never wish bad for this country. We will definitely survive it but u that are fans of this rubbish regime will definitely suffer it.

YOUR curse stays with you: no one will share it with you. Funny you, calling someone daft and dumb without objectively stating in clear terms why my submission was other than to go on raining curses onto YOURSELF ('cause it's yours 100%). Is that the height of your IQ?
THE article clearly comfirms that the jump was highly down to the devaluated naira WHICH GOES IN CONTRARY TO THE BELIEVE OF MANY RESPONDENTS HERETHAT SUMPTUOUS LOAN WAS TAKEN AGAIN.
BESIDES, the stat in question was largely on 2nd quarter which was largely gulped by the last administration WITH ANALYSTS INTERVIEW HOPING TODAY'S ADMINISTRATION'S POLICY WOULD TURN BACK THE TIDE (EVEN THOUGH IT CONTRIBUTED TO IT).
IF correction of wrong impression is BAD/DAFT to you, then your level of education SUCKS.

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Buhari4dullard: 5:33am On Sep 15, 2023
The Scratch Face tribe said druggie built Lagos.
Now he is looting Nigeria silly.
They forgot that Lagos had an advantage becos it was the capital.
Wait till when we break those skull miners will learn that human skulls are not money angry
OkpaNsukkaisBae:
But they said BAT is now saving funds thanks to excess revenue from fuel subsidy removal. Why are they still borrowing money? Government of propaganda.
Ebola is pocketing the money for his family.

7 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Groovedaddy: 5:34am On Sep 15, 2023
What about all the naira from Subsidy removal? Tinubu is spending it while he forgets there is debt to pay

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Ogonimilitant(m): 5:40am On Sep 15, 2023
Nigeria is working grin
Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Blitzerz: 5:41am On Sep 15, 2023
Yet minimum wage remain the same.

Balablu embezzlement

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by Racoon(m): 5:41am On Sep 15, 2023
Just 3 months! And the balabloo-blu-bulava drug baron government embezzlement and mortgaging of the battered Nigerian state continues.

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria’s Debt Jumps By 75% In Three Months, Hits N87 Trillion by nairalanda1(m): 5:43am On Sep 15, 2023
Yep, we are going to keep on borrowing and borrowing more.....because our economy is dependent on the price of oil. And so long as the price of oil is never where we want it to be (as at 2021, $103 per barrel) we won't have enough money, and we would have to keep on borrowing.

We are too dependent on oil. Too too dependent on oil. Our economy has to change urgently. There is no two ways about it. Niger delta oil is not enough for all of us, and the looting and stealing happening does not make the matter better.

Dutch disease.

3 Likes

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