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Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion - Politics (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsFive African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion (14459 Views)

Poll: Tinubu has collected the most Debts in Nigeria's history,despite high oil prices,no subsidy payment,worsening standard of living.

Yes 87% (185 votes)
No 12% (26 votes)
This poll has ended

1 2 3 Reply (Go Down)

Re: Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion by miketayo(m): 2:04am On May 27
malali:
Yes they do, with Boko haram and insecurity too......

Defending Tinubu is a full time job i bet.....
I don't support BAT.. but I'm not a mumu either. You came online and typed rubbish only to embarrass yourself.
Re: Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion by andrewza: 5:13am On May 27
malali:
Thank you for the analysis.
Also these countries have major infrastructure to show for these loans
Egypt exports power from their Benbar solar power plant which they built.
Nigeria cannot show one world structure despite all these crazy loans.
Yes and it important yo know who the money was borrowed from.

Egypt lenders are fellow Muslim nation mostly gulf states. They wont have the same interests rates and often those loan as you said where for a specific project


South Africa is even better off. Even though it has a massive debt to GDP it borrowed close to 90% of the money from south Africa. South Africa owes it self money.

A lot of the external debt is all so for speciol projects. There is a multi billion dollar loan from the EU with zero percent interest that for building wind and solar power.


Nigeria issue is has you said. Borrowing money from a world bank to pay for simply running the country.
Re: Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion by malali(op): 5:57am On May 27
miketayo:
I don't support BAT.. but I'm not a mumu either. You came online and typed rubbish only to embarrass yourself.
No mumu insinuations here, lets call a spade a spade.
I thought Buhari was the worst,it could get
Buhari borrowed, as oil was $30/barrel, COVID reliefs were needed, he had to pay petrol subsidy, he had to pay Forex subsidy and still pay all the salaries.


Tinubu is selling oil at $100/barrel, there is no COVID emergency, he is not paying petrol subsidy,he is not paying Forex subsidy...but he is borrowing far more than the previous regime.

Nigerians should be doing better economically. With the metrics of these present state. I initially thought Tinubu would do better, but if we continue at the current rate...we are headed in Zimbabwe era inflation and currency devaluation.
Re: Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion by AlphaTaikun: 3:42am On May 29
malali:
Five African countries rank among the world’s top 10 borrowers from the World Bank’s concessional lending arm, collectively accounting for $67.8 billion in outstanding debt, according to new data on global exposure patterns.

Five African countries are among the world's top 10 borrowers from the World Bank’s concessional lending arm (IDA), together owing $67.8 billion.
IDA provides low-interest or interest-free loans and grants to the poorest countries for development projects like infrastructure, health, and education.
Nigeria, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Kenya, and Ghana are Africa's top IDA borrowers, with Nigeria alone owing $18.5 billion.
African countries account for nearly a third of the total exposure among the top 10 IDA borrowers, reflecting both their growth potential and reliance on concessional finance.

African economies continue to feature prominently in the World Bank’s concessional lending architecture, with new data on International Development Association (IDA) exposure highlighting both their financing dependence and their centrality in global development flows.

The International Development Association (IDA) is the World Bank’s arm that provides low-interest or interest-free loans and grants to the world’s poorest countries.

Its goal is to help these economies fund essential development projects such as infrastructure, health, education, and poverty reduction programs, using long repayment periods and highly concessional terms to ease debt pressure.

According to the IDA's Quarterly Financial Statements dated March 31, 2026 (Unaudited), outstanding exposure under the World Bank’s concessional lending arm reached $230.8 billion across the top 10 borrowing countries, with lending heavily concentrated in a narrow set of emerging and developing economies.

African borrowers feature prominently in this mix, with five countries alone accounting for 29.4% ($67.8 billion) of the top-10 total—representing nearly half of that group’s combined exposure and about one-third of the overall concessional loan book.

Africa’s presence is particularly notable, with five countries which include Nigeria, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Kenya, and Ghana, ranking among the top 10 global borrowers.

Nigeria leads the continent with $18.5 billion in outstanding IDA exposure, reflecting its persistent infrastructure financing needs and demographic pressures.

Ethiopia follows closely at $14.4 billion, continuing to rely heavily on concessional funding amid ongoing macroeconomic adjustments.

Tanzania and Kenya remain significant borrowers at $14.3 billion and $13.2 billion respectively, while Ghana rounds out Africa’s representation with $7.4 billion.

Taken together, these five African economies account for nearly a third of total exposure among the top 10 borrowers, reinforcing the continent’s dual role as both a high-growth frontier and a major recipient of development finance.


The broader ranking is led by Bangladesh and Pakistan, while India, Vietnam, and Ukraine also feature prominently, reflecting a geographically diverse but highly concentrated lending portfolio.

The concentration of lending within a handful of countries highlights both opportunity and vulnerability in the global development finance system, where large borrowers shape portfolio risk while also anchoring long-term infrastructure and social investment pipelines.

Source: https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/markets/five-african-countries-feature-in-global-top-10-world-bank-borrowers-collectively/99f6fb3
Re: Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion by franvincoop: 8:23pm On Jun 04
You were missing in this forum for a while welcome back.
But remember say person wey wear white no suppose embrace person wey dey sell charcoal.
Prince Jegede Sokoya once said "take a pig to London and back, it will still be a pig"

malali:
No mumu insinuations here, lets call a spade a spade.
I thought Buhari was the worst,it could get
Buhari borrowed, as oil was $30/barrel, COVID reliefs were needed, he had to pay petrol subsidy, he had to pay Forex subsidy and still pay all the salaries.


Tinubu is selling oil at $100/barrel, there is no COVID emergency, he is not paying petrol subsidy,he is not paying Forex subsidy...but he is borrowing far more than the previous regime.

Nigerians should be doing better economically. With the metrics of these present state. I initially thought Tinubu would do better, but if we continue at the current rate...we are headed in Zimbabwe era inflation and currency devaluation.
Re: Five African Countries Top World Bank Borrowers, Owing $67.8 Billion by malali(op): 12:35am On Jun 05
franvincoop:
You were missing in this forum for a while welcome back.
But remember say person wey wear white no suppose embrace person wey dey sell charcoal.
Prince Jegede Sokoya once said "take a pig to London and back, it will still be a pig"
Had a family bereavement.
1 2 3 Reply

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