(1). Nigeria’s debt rises by 3trillion in 4 years
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.
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.
(2). Nigeria Debt rises by N7.51trillion in four years.
The Federal Government under President
Muhammadu Buhari and the 36 states of the federation as well as the
Federal Capital Territory have borrowed N7.51tn in the last two years,
statistics have revealed.
As of June 30, 2015, just a month after
the present crop of leaders took over the leadership of the country,
Nigeria’s total debt stood at N12.12tn. However, as of June 2017, the nation’s
total debt had climbed to N19.63tn, according to the latest debt
statistics obtained from the Debt Management Office.
The nation’s total indebtedness to
foreign and local creditors now stands at N19.16tn, the Debt Management
Office has said. This is N1.8tn increase from the N17.36tn recorded at
the end of December 2016.
As of March 31, 2015, the country’s total debt stood at N12.06tn. This means the debt level increased by N7.1tn in two years.
Segmenting the national debt, the DMO
put the Federal Government’s domestic debt at N11.97tn. Two years ago,
as of March 31, 2015, this component of the debt burden stood at
N8.51tn.
This means that within a period of two
years, the Federal Government has borrowed a total of N3.46tn from
domestic creditors. This shows that the domestic debt of the Federal
Government has increased by 40.71 per cent.
In the same period, the country’s
external debt (for the federal and state governments) rose from $9.46bn
to $13.81bn. This means that within the two-year period, the country’s
external debt rose by $4.35bn or 45.98 per cent.
The external debt component, however,
has been affected by exchange rate variations as the last two years have
witnessed noticeable changes in foreign exchange rates.
According to the DMO, the official
exchange rate of N306.35 to $1 was used in calculating the country’s
external debt for March 31, 2017, while the official rate of N197 to $1
was used in determining the foreign debt for March 31, 2015.
The domestic debt component of the
states stood at N2.96tn as of March 31, 2017, up from the figure of
N1.69bn at the same time in 2015.
This means that within the period of two years, the domestic debt of the states rose by N1.27tn or 75.15 per cent.
Amidst drying revenues from oil and gas,
the government has in the last two years increasingly depended on
borrowing even to carry out routine responsibilities.Although foreign debts are accounted as
cheaper than domestic debts, the government has increasingly depended on
domestic sources of borrowing as foreign donors place more stringent
conditions before granting credit facilities to the government.
To raise the required funds from the
domestic debt market, the Federal Government has been active in the
market with a number of instruments, including FGN Bonds and the Nigeria
Treasury Bill. It recently floated a new instrument known as the FGN
Savings Bond.
The International Monetary Fund had
recently projected that Nigeria’s indebtedness would climb to 24.1 per
cent of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product by 2018. It said that the
country’s current indebtedness would have reached 23.3 per cent of the
GDP by the end of 2017.
The country closed 2016 with a debt to
GDP ratio of 18.6 per cent. By the end of 2015, Nigeria’s debt to GDP
ratio stood at 12.1 per cent, according to the Bretton Wood institution.
Nigeria’s GDP for the year ended December 31, 2016 stood at N67.98tn, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
Going by the projection of 24.1 per cent
for 2018, within three years, the nation’s debt to GDP ratio would have
gone up by 100 per cent, from 12.1 per cent in 2015.
Although Nigeria’s debt to GDP ratio is
considered among the lowest in Africa, some experts have expressed
worries about the increase in debt accumulation in recent years, while
others are worried about the quality and utilisation of the debts.
The World Bank recently expressed
concern over the debt servicing to revenue ratio, saying that reduced
earnings might render the country’s debt unsustainable. A total of
N1.84tn was provided in the 2017 budget for debt servicing.
Nigeria’s debt profile is dominated by
local debts, which are characterised by high interest rates. Efforts are
being made to secure more foreign debts and reduce the exposure of the
Federal Government to the domestic debt market.

No comments:
Post a Comment