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Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue - Politics - Nairaland

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Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Kukutente23(op): 9:40am On Dec 20, 2025
Debt service and personnel costs have swallowed more than the Federal Government’s total revenue for the first seven months of 2025, even as receipts fell sharply below target and capital projects suffered deep cuts.

An analysis of the 2026–2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper, released on Wednesday on the website of the Budget Office of the Federation, showed that between January and July, the Federal Government earned N13.67tn as aggregate revenue, compared with a pro rata target of N23.85tn.

That left a revenue gap of N10.19tn, representing a shortfall of about 42.7 per cent. This shortfall occurred amid earlier claims by President Bola Tinubu in September when he said that Nigeria had met its revenue target for 2025 ahead of schedule and would no longer rely on borrowing to fund its budget.

Addressing stakeholders of The Buhari Organisation who visited him at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, Tinubu said his administration’s non-oil revenue drive had yielded enough to meet this year’s projections by August, reducing Nigeria’s dependence on external loans

“Today, I can stand here before you to brag: Nigeria is not borrowing. We have met our revenue target for the year, and we met it in August,” Tinubu told the delegation, which included former Nasarawa State Governor, Sen. Tanko Al-Makura, and other chieftains of the ruling All Progressives Congress.

However, the document does not validate this claim by the president, with the MTEF document showing that the revenue crisis was driven largely by a steep drop in oil receipts. Oil revenue for January to July stood at N4.64tn, compared with a pro rata target of N12.25tn, leaving a shortfall of N7.62tn or 62.2 per cent.

The share of dividends from entities such as the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas and development finance institutions also underperformed, yielding only N104.64bn against an expected N428.71bn. By contrast, some non-oil tax heads did better than expected. Company Income Tax collections for the Federal Government were N2.54tn, slightly above the prorated estimate of N2.49tn.

Value Added Tax also beat its projection, with FGN’s share rising to N630.10bn against a target of N567.54bn, an outperformance of about 11 per cent. However, these gains were not enough to compensate for weaknesses elsewhere.

Customs revenues fell to N988.29bn, about 39.1 per cent below the N1.62tn pro rata target, while Federation Account levies dropped by 70.1 per cent to N75.08bn.

The Nigeria Police Trust Fund levy and the share of oil price royalty also came in far below expectations, with the latter recording no inflow in the period.

The MTEF document read, “Overall, while VAT and EMTL provided some relief, their overperformance was insufficient to offset the deep shortfall in oil revenues and weaker-than-expected CIT collections.

“The midyear outcome highlights Nigeria’s continued fiscal vulnerability to oil sector underperformance, even as non-oil revenue sources gradually increase their contribution to the Federation Account.”

The document further showed that over the same period, the Federal Government spent N9.81tn on servicing domestic and external debts. When combined with personnel costs of N4.51tn for ministries, departments, and agencies and government-owned enterprises, debt service and salaries amounted to about N14.32tn, slightly above the total revenue recorded in the period.

This means that debt and wages alone were equivalent to roughly 105 per cent of the Federal Government’s income. The document showed that debt service alone already consumed about 71.8 per cent of aggregate Federal Government revenue in the first seven months of the year, underlining the pressure loan repayments are placing on the budget.

Capital budget suffers

On the expenditure side, the Federal Government appeared more successful in keeping recurrent obligations on schedule than in funding investment projects.

Total Federal Government expenditure (including government-owned enterprises and project-tied loans) was N20.40tn in the first seven months, against a pro rata target of N32.08tn, implying a 36.4 per cent shortfall. However, recurrent expenditure was much closer to plan: actual recurrent spending of N15.68tn was only 3.7 per cent below the N16.28tn pro rata target.

Within recurrent items, non-debt recurrent expenditure came to N5.87tn, down by 26 per cent compared with the prorated N7.93tn. Personnel costs for MDAs were N3.91tn, about 11.7 per cent lower than the N4.43tn expected for the period, while personnel for government-owned enterprises exactly matched the prorated N593.49bn. Pensions and gratuities, including service-wide pensions, were severely underfunded at N445.67bn, barely half of the N842.34bn pro rata figure.


The squeeze was even more visible on overheads and other service-wide votes. Overheads for MDAs amounted to N249.82bn, 64.8 per cent below the N709.53bn target, whereas overheads for GOEs were fully released. Other service-wide votes received only N56.73bn, compared with a prorated budget of N617.09bn, indicating a 90.8 per cent shortfall. The special intervention programme got no funding in the period, despite an expected N116.67bn.

By contrast, debt service overshot its budget. The Federal Government spent N9.81tn on debt obligations in the seven months, against a target of N8.35tn, an overshoot of 17.5 per cent. Domestic debt service stood at N4.65tn, 10.9 per cent above the N4.19tn pro rata figure, while foreign debt service jumped to N5.07tn, about 28.7 per cent higher than the N3.94tn projection.

The sinking fund, used to redeem maturing obligations, undershot its target, recording N96.70bn against N220.09bn.

The heavy debt burden is not new. The same MTEF document recalled that total debt service cost in 2024 was N13.12tn, equivalent to 46 per cent of Federal Government expenditure and 77.5 per cent of revenues, and warned that high servicing costs and limited fiscal space were constraining investment in critical sectors such as health, education, and infrastructure.

Capital projects rollover

Capital spending has borne the brunt of the fiscal squeeze so far in 2025. Aggregate capital expenditure for the first seven months was N3.60tn, compared with a prorated budget of N13.67tn, implying a shortfall of 73.7 per cent.

The sharpest cuts were recorded in capital projects executed by MDAs. Against a pro rata target of N10.81tn, MDAs and other capital votes received just N834.80bn, meaning that more than nine-tenths of the planned capital funds for the period were not released.

Grants and donor-funded projects fared relatively better, with N609.13bn spent against N421.11bn pro rata, while multilateral and bilateral project-tied loans recorded N1.68tn, slightly below the N1.96tn prorated estimate.

The Budget Office linked the weak capital outturn partly to the extension of the 2024 budget. It explained that many ongoing projects were still being financed under last year’s capital provisions after the National Assembly approved a rollover of the 2024 capital budget to December 2025.

As a result, part of the 2024 capital vote—about N2.23tn—was being financed in 2025, while new releases under the 2025 capital budget were managed cautiously in line with revenue performance.

“It is important to note that the execution of the capital component of the 2024 budget remains ongoing, following the National Assembly’s approval to extend its implementation period until December 2025,” the document stated, adding that expenditure releases in 2025 had been “cautiously managed in line with revenue outturns and the extended implementation of the FY 2024 budget.”

In recent years, delays in budget passage, late releases of funds, and frequent supplementary appropriations have resulted in overlapping fiscal cycles, with capital components of previous budgets extending well into subsequent years.

Earlier, The PUNCH reported that President Bola Tinubu asked the National Assembly to consider and pass the Appropriation, Repeal and Re-enactment Bill 2 of 2024, involving a total proposed expenditure of N43.56tn for the 2025 fiscal year.

The request was conveyed in separate letters to the Senate and the House of Representatives on Wednesday. According to the President, the proposed legislation is aimed at “ending the practice of running multiple budgets, while ensuring improved capital performance for both the 2024 and 2025 capital budgets.”

He stated, “This bill is to bring an end to the practice of running multiple budgets concurrently, while at the same time ensuring reasonable – indeed unprecedentedly high – capital performance rates on the 2024 and 2025 capital budgets.”

The PUNCH earlier reported that the Federal Government ordered ministries, departments, and agencies to carry over 70 per cent of their 2025 capital budget into the 2026 fiscal year as the administration moves to prioritise the completion of existing projects and contain spending pressures in the face of weak revenues.

This directive is contained in the 2026 Abridged Budget Call Circular issued by the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning and circulated to all ministers, service chiefs, heads of agencies, and top government officials in Abuja.

The circular stated that ministries and agencies must continue with the allocations already approved in the 2025 budget rather than seeking fresh projects.

It explained that the rollover is based on what it described as the immediate needs of the country and the development priorities of the administration. It listed the priorities that align with the policy direction of the government, such as national security, the economy, education, health, agriculture, infrastructure, power and energy, as well as social safety nets, including women and youth empowerment.

According to the circular, “MDAs are to upload 70 per cent of their 2025 FGN Budget to continue in FY2026. All such rollover and uploads MUST be in line with the immediate needs of the country as well as the government’s development priorities that align with the policy direction of the new administration, which hinges on National Security, the Economy, Education, Health, Agriculture, Infrastructure, Power & Energy, as well as social safety nets, women & youth empowerment.”

It also explained that only 30 per cent of the 2025 capital budget would be released within the current fiscal year, while the remaining 70 per cent would serve as the foundation for the 2026 capital budget, replacing the previous method of a traditional rollover.

Economist and professor at the Olabisi Onabanjo University, Sheriffdeen Tella, earlier faulted the basis of preparing the 2026 budget when implementation of the 2025 budget had barely begun.

He said he found the 2026 deficit troubling because “the budget of 2026 is supposed to be premised on the implementation or performance of 2025,” yet “they have just started implementing the 2025 budget… in December 2025.”

Tella added that “there is no basis for any budget because what they had, they have not implemented, and supported that the government should have rolled over the 2025 plan into 2026 instead of preparing a fresh document.

The National President of the Nigerian Economic Society, Professor Adeola Adenikinju, also criticised the government for drifting away from the January to December budget cycle. He said the timing of the MTEF/FSP approval showed that Nigeria was again running behind schedule, which undermines predictability and complicates economic planning.

Adenikinju said, “The 2026 budget should have been in the National Assembly for consultation so that we can keep to this January 1st thing. That makes our fiscal system predictable.” He argued that the late budget presentation prevents the National Assembly from carrying out proper scrutiny.

However, the Director of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, supported the decision of the Federal Government to roll over 70 per cent of the 2025 budget to next year.

He said it was a necessary step to restore credibility to the budget process. He described it as a way to “normalise things because there will be no end to continuous rolling wells of budgets” if the situation were allowed to continue indefinitely.

Yusuf explained that it was unrealistic to keep approving fresh capital allocations when previous ones were still unimplemented.
https://punchng.com/salaries-debt-service-gulp-105-of-govt-revenue/

Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Kukutente23(op):
This is disastrous
Subsidy removal and naira devaluation was expected to balance the budget such that loans if needed will be focused only on capital expenditure
But here we are. Our revenue can't even cover our running cost even with the twin evil policies of the neoliberal puppets driving our economy
What they claimed would be benefits of the "reforms" still remain a mirage
Same way they lied that they've met revenue targets in August only to come back to confess that they were only able to achieve 30% revenue for the year. Seeing them hailing and cheering yesterday, it's obvious they see themselves as doing a great job while their zombies get thinner each day, emaciated by ebi
What's obvious is that subsidy removal is too little, too late. It should have happened in 2012 when the economy was much buoyant and there were enough guardrails and competence to ensure its meaningful execution. Today, it's just a knee jerk reaction to impress the Western puppeteers. There's no clear vision of what to do to get the country out of the ditch. That's why the solution proffered for food inflation was imports and encouragement of smuggling...
APC is a distaster

Fergie001 nlfpmod sey you won't let Nigerians know where Ténubou dey carry dem go
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by AMINDA: 10:06am On Dec 20, 2025
The Lagos boys are making Buhari look like Albert Einstein. It's not by being garrulous and arrogant while claiming to know it all.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Kanixt(m): 10:39am On Dec 20, 2025
All this long gragra won't help a common man, just bring back our fuel subsidy, then continue with your budget deficit.

Note: fertilizer and agro chemicals need to come down in order to sustain food prices.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by CodeTemplarr: 10:53am On Dec 20, 2025
Yekinically.
The painful thing is, if a northerner gets to power in few years time, they will repeat what Buhari did and shatter any Tinubu record we are currently lamenting. The loans arent being repaid with their gold or lithium revenue. The bulk of salary is for their people also. The defence apparatus is firmly in their hands so all huge defence budget is for them.

My problem with broda Yekini is the choice of projects being executed. He can do better for the south.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by CodeTemplarr: 10:55am On Dec 20, 2025
AMINDA:
The Lagos boys are making Buhari look like Albert Einstein. It's not by being garrulous and arrogant while claiming to know it all.
How much is kaduna generating under your family?
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by mrvitalis(m): 11:00am On Dec 20, 2025
We said it here, they brought propaganda that debt service to revenue ratio have drop

People like that Madrid guy were all over this space talking absolutely anything to support APC

This is why we are against costal road

That costal road would devalue naira and make everyone poorer but na shiny new road is all they care about
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by AMINDA: 11:06am On Dec 20, 2025
mrvitalis:
We said it here, they brought propaganda that debt service to revenue ratio have drop

People like that Madrid guy were all over this space talking absolutely anything to support APC

This is why we are against costal road

That costal road would devalue naira and make everyone poorer but na shiny new road is all they care about
What is most suspicious is that despite several trillions allocated to the coastal road, it does not appear in the budget. Man is just governing Nigeria like it's his personal enterprise, without accountability. This is why they expend huge sums of money on attracting governors and legislators to their party. It's state capture.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by givedemwotowoto:
They complained that Buhari messed up the economy after praising him for 8 years, that he was using most of our revenue to pay debt, so they removed petrol subsidy and floated the naira, plunging millions into sudden extreme poverty. Still, the problem remains poor economic management, wastefulness, and corruption.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by omoredia: 1:43pm On Dec 20, 2025
Disgraced nation indeed.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Disenfranchised: 1:43pm On Dec 20, 2025
Kukutente23:
This is disastrous
Subsidy removal and naira devaluation was expected to balance the budget such that loans if needed will be focused only on capital expenditure
But here we are. Our revenue can't even cover our running cost even with the twin evil policies of the neoliberal puppets driving our economy
What they claimed would be benefits of the "reforms" still remain a mirage
Same way they lied that they've met revenue targets in August only to come back to confess that they were only able to achieve 30% revenue for the year. Seeing them hailing and cheering yesterday, it's obvious they see themselves as doing a great job while their zombies get thinner each day, emaciated by ebi
What's obvious is that subsidy removal is too little, too late. It should have happened in 2012 when the economy was much buoyant and there were enough guardrails and competence to ensure its meaningful execution. Today, it's just a knee jerk reaction to impress the Western puppeteers. There's no clear vision of what to do to get the country out of the ditch. That's why the solution proffered for food inflation was imports and encouragement of smuggling...
APC is a distaster

Fergie001 nlfpmod sey you won't let Nigerians know where Ténubou dey carry dem go
If you think that tinubu's cbn is not printing money then you are a joker.

Not directed at you.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by oyeb15: 1:43pm On Dec 20, 2025
The country is not progressing. That's wat matters to d people not your explanation.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Gotocourt: 1:44pm On Dec 20, 2025
They want to justify the incoming tax angry.
What happened to subsidy removal funds and naira subsidy funds angry
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Maj196(m): 1:45pm On Dec 20, 2025
Which number is after Trillion because I think we are running out of numbers
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Princedapace(m): 1:47pm On Dec 20, 2025
A country that fails to produce will bleed. Nigeria is purely a consumer focused country, even increased tax will not solve ur problem. Ur problem lies in ability to produce and export.
Start with fxing ur medicals to attract lots of foriegners, fix ur toursim to boost lots of money within, u can make a lot from value added tax if ur people have high purchasing power. U can do this by lowering income tax and company income tax and maybe increase value added tax to 10 percent, fix ur toursim to attract forigenrs and locals to places where they will pay VAT to enjoy luxury. Find ways to encourage ur remote working force to attract more money abroad. See how to lobby Nigerians living abroad to invest here and make good returns and keep investing.
As it is, naija is on free fall and from what I am seeing, these men are lost, cant fix it.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by U09ce: 1:53pm On Dec 20, 2025
Abeg mek them no deceive us. Why lumping salaries and debt service? How are they related? Abi it is the salary earners that asked them go on a borrowing spree that hardly transforms to tangibke development?
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Mindlog: 1:57pm On Dec 20, 2025
Renewed hopelessness on the beat.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by grandstar(m): 2:03pm On Dec 20, 2025
The drop in oil prices has devastated government revenue.

Trump's utterly useless trade wars and protectionist policies has slowed the US economy leading to reduced demand for crude oil.

The world's economy may pickup if the US Supreme Court nullifies Trump's tariffs. The full opening of the US economy to trade will drive up oil demand which will pull up the depressed oil prices.

One is just waiting for the verdict
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Didijiji: 2:06pm On Dec 20, 2025
Princedapace:
A country that fails to produce will bleed. Nigeria is purely a consumer focused country, even increased tax will not solve ur problem. Ur problem lies in ability to produce and export.
Start with fxing ur medicals to attract lots of foriegners, fix ur toursim to boost lots of money within, u can make a lot from value added tax if ur people have high purchasing power. U can do this by lowering income tax and company income tax and maybe increase value added tax to 10 percent, fix ur toursim to attract forigenrs and locals to places where they will pay VAT to enjoy luxury. Find ways to encourage ur remote working force to attract more money abroad. See how to lobby Nigerians living abroad to invest here and make good returns and keep investing.
As it is, naija is on free fall and from what I am seeing, these men are lost, cant fix it.
you have said it all. APC has been confused since 2015
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by iwaeda: 2:30pm On Dec 20, 2025
The master strategist that is widening the tax net and reduce you purchasing power. grin grin grin
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Kukutente23(op): 2:32pm On Dec 20, 2025
grandstar:
The drop in oil prices has devastated government revenue.

Trump's utterly useless trade wars and protectionist policies has slowed the US economy leading to reduced demand for crude oil.

The world's economy may pickup if the US Supreme Court nullifies Trump's tariffs. The full opening of the US economy to trade will drive up oil demand which will pull up the depressed oil prices.

One is just waiting for the verdict
You should blame the unreasonable budget benchmark
Which serious international trade firm projected crude price above $70 for 2025?
Your god is ready to repeat same in 2026
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by bunmioguns(m): 2:33pm On Dec 20, 2025
Dr. Muda Yusuf, abeg Shift! Which one be 'normalise things'?
​If I don't pay my house rent and I tell my landlord I’m 'rolling over' the payment to 2026 to 'restore credibility,' will he not use my head to break coconut?
​They present budgets late, implement nothing, and then use big English to explain why the money is gone but the roads are still death traps. The National Assembly is just a rubber stamp factory. January 1st or December 31st, the result is the same: Suffering and Smiling.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by grandstar(m): 3:10pm On Dec 20, 2025
Kukutente23:
You should blame the unreasonable budget benchmark
Which serious international trade firm projected crude price above $70 for 2025?
Your god is ready to repeat same in 2026
He isn't my god. I don't even vote.

Economics is my real love.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Anither563: 3:21pm On Dec 20, 2025
This is the reality of the fiscal mess we inherited. The Tinubu administration is working hard to fix it.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by anonimi: 3:22pm On Dec 20, 2025
Kanixt:
All this long gragra won't help a common man, just bring back our fuel subsidy, then continue with your budget deficit.

Note: fertilizer and agro chemicals need to come down in order to sustain food prices.
Can you please remind us how much deficit we had during the 16 prosperous years of PDP deregulation and privatisation capitalists?

How much was petrol then before we allowed ourselves to be screwed by Tinubu’s A-looter Propaganda Congress, APC fake promises and lies huh

anonimi:
Petrol should never cost more than N70 per litre, says APC

January 19, 2015

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has described as mere tokenism the reduction of petrol price from N97 to N87 per litre, saying the petroleum product ordinarily should sell for N70.

On Sunday, the federal government announced the reduction of petrol price, citing the fall of global crude oil price.

But the APC through Lai Mohammed, its spokesman, on Monday accused the government of making a show out of deceit, saying “a 10.3 per cent slash in the price of petrol was a mere tokenism at a time the price of crude oil has crashed by about 60 per cent”.

It argued that the pump price of a litre of petrol should not be more than 70 Naira, alleging that at N87 per litre, the government was forcing Nigerians to subsidise the massive corruption in the oil sector by N17 for every litre of fuel.

https://www.thecable.ng/petrol-never-cost-n70-per-litre-says-apc/
>>
>>>


Buhari’ll reduce petrol to N40/L —David-West

FORMER Minister of Petroleum and Energy, Prof. Tamunoemi David-West, said that Nigerians should expect sharp drop in petrol price from the current N87 to about N40 per litre, saying, “the president-elect, Gen. Mohammed Buhari, will reduce the fuel pump price to N40 per litre.”

https://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/04/buharill-reduce-petrol-to-n40l-david-west/
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by ozo13(m): 3:26pm On Dec 20, 2025
From 95% of revenue spent on debt servicing to 105% of use to service salaries and debt.
I Sabi the game played in this figures
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by HgAkpobomeEr: 3:27pm On Dec 20, 2025
This is a good step in the right direction.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by Kukutente23(op): 3:29pm On Dec 20, 2025
grandstar:
He isn't my god. I don't even vote.

Economics is my real love.
Economics that's laced with political bias is not economics
It's advocacy which is within your rights
You praised Buhari's policies to high heavens to be left office when you dumped him like hot agbado
That's a signature if BATists
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by grandstar(m): 4:11pm On Dec 20, 2025
Kukutente23:
Economics that's laced with political bias is not economics
It's advocacy which is within your rights
You praised Buhari's policies to high heavens to be left office when you dumped him like hot agbado
That's a signature if BATists
Show me ten posts where I praised Buhari to high heavens. I waa never a fan of the man. From almost his 30 days, I waa a big critic of his economic policies.

Just point to 10 posts.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by ebukal67x: 4:15pm On Dec 20, 2025
We are in a financial mess. The president should have focused on 2026 budget only.
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by AMINDA: 4:42pm On Dec 20, 2025
ebukal67x:
We are in a financial mess. The president should have focused on 2026 budget only.
Lol. That is not what the other Agbadorians are saying. You people need to put heads together and agree on a common front. Are we or are we not in a financial mess? I thought the all-knowing Lagos boys had it on lockdown?
Re: Salaries, Debt Service Gulp 105% Of Government Revenue by jojothaiv(m): 5:02pm On Dec 20, 2025
Well, the freethinkers said that loans and servicing of loans is a normal thing for any developing nation so I guess our very own beloved Nigeria isn't an exception to that rule, at least, we are growing and there are signs out there to back it up.
1 2 Reply

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