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Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Kukutente23(op): 2:49pm On Jul 04
Nigeria failed to record public spending equivalent to about 2% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in recent official budgets, creating a gap between the country’s reported fiscal deficit and its actual financing needs, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The disclosure was made on Wednesday by the IMF Resident Representative in Nigeria, Christian Ebeke, during an engagement with business executives in Lagos.

According to the IMF, the omission makes Nigeria’s fiscal deficit appear smaller than the government’s actual borrowing requirement because some public expenditures, particularly capital projects, were executed outside the official budget framework.

What the IMF is saying
Ebeke said the IMF’s assessment showed that a significant portion of government spending was not captured in official budget documents and implementation reports.

“So far we think that there are about 2% of GDP of expenditure that were not reported that should be reported and should be recorded, so that this statistical discrepancy will disappear,” Ebeke said.
He explained that the discrepancy is partly linked to large government projects executed off-budget, which distort assessments of Nigeria’s fiscal position and public investment levels.

According to him, incomplete reporting also makes it more difficult to coordinate fiscal and monetary policies because policymakers may not have an accurate picture of the country’s true budget deficit.
Ebeke added that Nigerian authorities have started addressing the issue by reviewing and revising recent budget laws to incorporate previously unrecorded expenditures, although updated budget implementation reports are still required.

He stressed that improving fiscal transparency remains critical, noting that off-budget spending also raises concerns about procurement processes and public accountability.

More insights
The IMF noted that better fiscal reporting would improve the credibility of Nigeria’s public finances and provide a clearer picture of government spending and borrowing.

Recording all public expenditures would eliminate the statistical discrepancy between reported fiscal deficits and actual financing requirements.
He added that greater transparency would strengthen fiscal oversight and improve coordination between monetary and fiscal authorities.

The Fund also noted that comprehensive budget reporting is essential for assessing the effectiveness of public investment and ensuring accountability in government spending.
The IMF’s findings suggest that Nigeria’s fiscal deficit may be understated when compared with the government’s actual financing needs because some expenditures are executed outside the official budget.

What you should know
In its latest Article IV Consultation, the IMF commended Nigeria’s recent economic reforms, including foreign exchange liberalisation and fuel subsidy removal, stating that they have helped strengthen macroeconomic stability and improve investor confidence.

However, the Fund also cautioned that the benefits of the reforms have yet to translate into broad-based improvements in living standards and warned that Nigeria remains vulnerable to external shocks, including geopolitical tensions and fluctuations in global commodity markets.
Also, the Fund cautioned Nigeria over its plan to raise up to $5 billion through a derivatives-based financing arrangement with First Abu Dhabi Bank, warning that such transactions are often complex and lack transparency.
https://nairametrics.com/2026/07/01/imf-nigeria-omits-public-spending-worth-2-of-gdp-from-official-budgets/

Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Fujiyama: 5:09pm On Jul 04
undecided

This sort of thing is what parliament is designed to checkmate. Unfortunately we have failed in that area.

So...this country is dipping its fingers and toes in the dark waters of "off-balance sheet" transactions (the economic wizards should correct me if I am wrong)...

Isn't this (or something close to it) what killed those big banks in 2008 and set the world on fire?
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by 1vandragon: 5:13pm On Jul 04
All budgets presented by bat and approved by the NASS needs to be audited.

That is how manipulated tax laws were gazetted and the prime suspect rewarded with a ministerial post instead of being subjected to investigation.

I also recall elrufai alleging that 100bn was unaccounted for every month under this administration.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by DeltaBachelor(m): 6:29pm On Jul 04
lol. Intentionally I guess !
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by BlocksNG(m): 6:29pm On Jul 04
this time will pass, surely.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by phoneport(m): 6:33pm On Jul 04
Is there anything Tinubu and his gang cannot do huh
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Basic123: 6:40pm On Jul 04
IMF and their stupidity.....

Making weird claims!


They will never leave developing countries alone
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by dgr8truth(m): 6:51pm On Jul 04
not many people will make meaningful comment here because they don't know the implication of this mismanagement or corruption.

This revelation by the IMF exposes one of the biggest problems destroying the lives of ordinary Nigerians, a lack of transparency and accountability in government spending. When expenditures worth about 2% of GDP can happen outside proper budget records, it raises serious questions about how public funds are being managed by Tinubu government.

For the average Nigerian struggling with high food prices, unemployment, poor healthcare, bad roads, unreliable power supply, and rising costs of living, these are not just accounting errors — they represent opportunities lost. Every untracked naira could have been a classroom, a hospital, a road, support for small businesses, or relief for struggling families.

A government that demands sacrifice from citizens through subsidy removal, higher taxes, and economic reforms must also show discipline and honesty in how it manages public resources. Transparency cannot be optional.

This is why corruption remains deeply entrenched in this Tinubu system: billions can move through unclear channels like the gbajagate while ordinary Nigerians are asked to endure hardship in the name of economic reform and recovery. No nation can build trust when citizens feel the burden while those in power avoid accountability.

Nigeria does not lack resources; it suffers from poor management, waste, and a political culture where public money too often escapes proper scrutiny. Until accountability becomes stronger than corruption, ordinary Nigerians will continue to pay the price for the failures of leadership.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Clobisman(m): 6:56pm On Jul 04
This is possible because we don’t have an efficient legislature because the akpabio led senate is just an appendage of the tinubu led executive. This type of recklessness gets presidents impeached and even the leadership of the legislature sacked but not in my country.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by dalitigator(m): 7:04pm On Jul 04
Kukutente23:
https://nairametrics.com/2026/07/01/imf-nigeria-omits-public-spending-worth-2-of-gdp-from-official-budgets/
We love sensational stories as a country and as a people. And it is very very shameful.

We hate to ask deeper questions. And that is a major problem with Nigeria and Nigerians.

This country won't get any better until we like to ask deeper and meaningful questions.

I once recall when one ex Rivers State Governor and minister was coming on twitter space. Everyone was being sentimental until I ask a very harmless question. The man could not give a direct answer. I was later removed from the space. And my one year blue tick wen I be buy was suddenly terminated and no refund till date. Any time I remember, I go just laugh and keep quiet.

Well! Make I nor talk too much. Make IMF produce the report and also show us how they arrived at their conclusions. Make we self see and study for ourselves.

We will like to know if we might arrive at the same conclusions or not.

Until then, na laugh I dey laugh at all these kind sensational stories.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by bigwig071(m): 7:13pm On Jul 04
How Would You Justify The Following Extravagant Spendings Under Tinubu's Government:

1. 21 Billion Naira To Renovate The Vice President House. No like they bought new kidneys or anything...for a house already functional. Done with public funds.

2. 70 Billion Naira To The National Assembly Members To Buy SUVs At The Cost 160 Million Naira Per One For Senators And House Of Representatives Members Specifically. To buy silence is every expensive.

3. 4 Billion Naira To Renovate Dodan Barrack Lagos Another 3 Billion Naira To Renovate Aguda House

4. 5 Billion Naira Was Given To Presidential Tax Reforms Committee Of Less Than Twenty People Headed By Taiwo Oyedele With Nothing To Show For It

6. 1.5 Billion Naira To Purchase Cars For Your Wife Senator Oluremi Tinubu Despite The Fact That First Lady Office Is Not Recognised By Our Constitution. Public funds they will later come around and claim they donated.

7. 300% Salary Increase For The Judges Which Was Speedily Passed By The Insensitive And Irresponsible Senators. The law has been bought.

8. 5 Billion Naira Was Budgeted For Presidential Fleet Of Cars For President Bola Ahmad Tinubu. I mean for someone who already has over 40 cars following him already.

9. 5 Billion equally budgeted for Presidential Yatch. The commonwealth is now a personal wealth.

10. 225 Billion naira spent on so-called Presidential Jet Festus Keyamo compensated.

11. 90 Billion naira spent on 2024 Hajj pilgrimage . Religion is a personal business. This is extravagant and irrelevant.

12. Billions of Naira Was Budgeted For Trips Including The Vice President Kashim Shettima To The Detriment Of The Citizens

13. Every Senator Is Paid 21 Million Naira Monthly

14. House Of Representatives Are Earning 13.5 Million Monthly All The Increment Was Done By Tinubu's Government

15. 15 Trillion Naira Lagos Calabar Coastal Road Was Awarded Illegally To Tinubu's Friend A Lebanese Gilbert Chagoury Who Was Repatriated Back To His Country By The Former President Obasanjo. I mean "awarded." No bids.

16. Billions lavished to lobbyist to romance against the Christian genocide.

17. How about the crazy number of ministers doing nothing?

18. N36Billion used shamelessly to Repaint the International Conference Centre...

Nigeria is a rich country. But ruled by the worst.

Argue with yourself.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by ElSudani: 7:18pm On Jul 04
dgr8truth:
not many people will make meaningful comment here because they don't know the implication of this mismanagement or corruption.

This revelation by the IMF exposes one of the biggest problems destroying the lives of ordinary Nigerians, a lack of transparency and accountability in government spending. When expenditures worth about 2% of GDP can happen outside proper budget records, it raises serious questions about how public funds are being managed by Tinubu government.

For the average Nigerian struggling with high food prices, unemployment, poor healthcare, bad roads, unreliable power supply, and rising costs of living, these are not just accounting errors — they represent opportunities lost. Every untracked naira could have been a classroom, a hospital, a road, support for small businesses, or relief for struggling families.

A government that demands sacrifice from citizens through subsidy removal, higher taxes, and economic reforms must also show discipline and honesty in how it manages public resources. Transparency cannot be optional.

This is why corruption remains deeply entrenched in this Tinubu system: billions can move through unclear channels like the gbajagate while ordinary Nigerians are asked to endure hardship in the name of economic reform and recovery. No nation can build trust when citizens feel the burden while those in power avoid accountability.

Nigeria does not lack resources; it suffers from poor management, waste, and a political culture where public money too often escapes proper scrutiny. Until accountability becomes stronger than corruption, ordinary Nigerians will continue to pay the price for the failures of leadership.
So, what exactly are these projects awarded or implemented outside of the budget? Did IMF mention any?
Did government offer any explanation?
No, none of these happened, just a bunch of unsubstantiated allegations.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by DatNiggaDaz: 7:25pm On Jul 04
grin grin

I will say it again and continue to say it, there is no pathway for the faaake certttifficcate hollldderr to another round of snatching and grabbing in 2027.

The faaakkee guru strategist must be disgraced from that snatched Office
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Mrexcell(m): 7:36pm On Jul 04
That's over a trillion naira of total nigeria's 2026 budget.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by LagbajaTheBEREAN: 7:38pm On Jul 04
Fujiyama:
undecided

This sort of thing is what parliament is designed to checkmate. Unfortunately we have failed in that area.

So...this country is dipping its fingers and toes in the dark waters of "off-balance sheet" transactions (the economic wizards should correct me if I am wrong)...

Isn't this (or something close to it) what killed those big banks in 2008 and set the world on fire?
It's terrible to say the least then...
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by MrSly(m): 7:40pm On Jul 04
Kukutente23:
https://nairametrics.com/2026/07/01/imf-nigeria-omits-public-spending-worth-2-of-gdp-from-official-budgets/
All these back and forth are happening under Tinubu, the builder of Lagos from lagoons.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Kelklein(m): 7:51pm On Jul 04
In normal climes, peplle go to jail after government for even lesser economic crimes.. check South Africa foe example, you can't misgovern that country this way, and not go to jail after your tenure..

Sadly they keep weakening our institutions and making them unable to tackle vices like this.

This is one of the dangers of Rubber Stamp National Assembly.. 🤔🤔
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by aariwa(m): 8:08pm On Jul 04
Imagine IMF a world body now confirming the corruption and theft by this depraved illegitimate government no Nigerian voted
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by chaerman: 8:17pm On Jul 04
Amd how that one take concern them!!
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by jaxxy(m): 8:25pm On Jul 04
Reforms with no transparency or accountability and major discrepancies.. Thats just the obivious one imf can detect, theres many more misapropriated funds including non existent agencies getting federal Allocation.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by GodHimself(m): 9:31pm On Jul 04
You are not expected to think for yourself.

dalitigator:
We love sensational stories as a country and as a people. And it is very very shameful.

We hate to ask deeper questions. And that is a major problem with Nigeria and Nigerians.

This country won't get any better until we like to ask deeper and meaningful questions.

I once recall when one ex Rivers State Governor and minister was coming on twitter space. Everyone was being sentimental until I ask a very harmless question. The man could not give a direct answer. I was later removed from the space. And my one year blue tick wen I be buy was suddenly terminated and no refund till date. Any time I remember, I go just laugh and keep quiet.

Well! Make I nor talk too much. Make IMF produce the report and also show us how they arrived at their conclusions. Make we self see and study for ourselves.

We will like to know if we might arrive at the same conclusions or not.

Until then, na laugh I dey laugh at all these kind sensational stories.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by AMINDA:
Where are the snake oil merchants that said revenue is our problem? The money probably got diverted Aderemi and Gbaja style. Budgets for roads have only seen a 5% disbursement rate in 3 years while 2025 budget is still running in 2026. Local contractors continue to stage protests due to non-payment. The quantum of corruption that will be unearthed by the next government will be one for the history books. This is why they are doing everything to ensure they are the only candidate on the ballot.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by PACIONS(m): 10:36pm On Jul 04
As a concerned citizen, a development strategist, an advocate for positive change, an educator, a technical designer, a blockchain developer, and a space advocate, I feel deeply worried about the recent revelation of ₦8.83 trillion in unreported spending in Nigeria’s budget.

This is not just a number. This is a serious issue of transparency and accountability. When a government spends money that is not properly recorded, it means the people are not fully informed about how their resources are being used. That is not good for trust, and it is not good for development.

Let me be very clear in simple terms: if what the IMF reported is true, then Nigeria is operating with a financial system that is not fully open. And any system that is not open creates room for misuse, waste, and confusion.

I don’t blame Sowore for calling the Tinubu-led administration criminals. When figures like this come out, people will naturally question the integrity of leadership. It raises serious concerns that cannot be ignored.

As an opposition member in ADP, I must also say this plainly: APC has failed Nigerians in many ways, and situations like this only strengthen the belief that the system is not working as it should. Many Nigerians now see APC as a party that has not been transparent, and to some, it even looks like fraud against the people.

But beyond politics, this is about Nigeria. We need a system where:

* Every naira spent is recorded
* Every project is visible
* Every citizen can track government spending

Technology can make this possible. With digital systems, blockchain transparency, and open budgeting, Nigerians should be able to see where their money is going in real time.

Nigeria can do better. We must demand better.

The future we want is one built on truth, accountability, and clear leadership—not hidden spending and unclear records.

It is time to fix the system.

Ogunfeyitimi Tope Joshua (Geocologist)
OGHA ABK NORTH 2027
Action Democratic Party

Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by strangest(m): 11:43pm On Jul 04
IMF donnturn to OBIDIENTS .. We no go gre
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Kanwulia: 12:07am On Jul 05
Omission or Commission? All na corruption!

Wetin you dey omit and wetin you dey commit? CRIMINALS wey nor fit give accurate records🙄🙄🙄🙄
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by grandstar(m): 12:23am On Jul 05
Basic123:
IMF and their stupidity.....

Making weird claims!


They will never leave developing countries alone
"Damned if i do, damned if I don't!"

Anything coming from the IMF is unacceptable.

No one adores a no nonsense person.

Was the coastal road captured in the budget? I really doubt it.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by lawani(m): 1:12am On Jul 05
That will be like twenty percent of total federal revenue spent outside the budget

Added to the fact huge contracts are being awarded without bidding. That in itself is a crime.

Imagine President Obasanjo awarding GSM licenses without any form of bidding. Just to his friends.

Then the claims by several people that the budget is not being implemented at all. Funds are diverted to anywhere the President wants.

This money being mismanaged is no longer free oil money as it used to be
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by 3seriez(m): 1:41am On Jul 05
When the legislature are in bed with the executive, this is what you get.
In Nigeria, nothing should surprise you , nothing.
Re: Nigeria Omits Public Spending Worth 2% Of GDP From Official Budgets - IMF by Princedapace(m): 2:19am On Jul 05
dgr8truth:
not many people will make meaningful comment here because they don't know the implication of this mismanagement or corruption.

This revelation by the IMF exposes one of the biggest problems destroying the lives of ordinary Nigerians, a lack of transparency and accountability in government spending. When expenditures worth about 2% of GDP can happen outside proper budget records, it raises serious questions about how public funds are being managed by Tinubu government.

For the average Nigerian struggling with high food prices, unemployment, poor healthcare, bad roads, unreliable power supply, and rising costs of living, these are not just accounting errors — they represent opportunities lost. Every untracked naira could have been a classroom, a hospital, a road, support for small businesses, or relief for struggling families.

A government that demands sacrifice from citizens through subsidy removal, higher taxes, and economic reforms must also show discipline and honesty in how it manages public resources. Transparency cannot be optional.

This is why corruption remains deeply entrenched in this Tinubu system: billions can move through unclear channels like the gbajagate while ordinary Nigerians are asked to endure hardship in the name of economic reform and recovery. No nation can build trust when citizens feel the burden while those in power avoid accountability.

Nigeria does not lack resources; it suffers from poor management, waste, and a political culture where public money too often escapes proper scrutiny. Until accountability becomes stronger than corruption, ordinary Nigerians will continue to pay the price for the failures of leadership.
I like the last part. Nigeria does not lack resources she has enough, she has means of making mad money from her various reosurces, but the county is heavily corrupt. Nigeria does not need to heavy tax her poor citizens. Nigeria has money but mismanagement and extreme corruption are the problem.
1 2 Reply

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