impact of coronavirus on
the economy, the country’s debt stock may hit N30 trillion before the
end of 2020.
Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed had on Monday, said the government will
ask for $3.4bn from the IMF, $2.5bn from the World Bank and another
$1bn from the African Development Bank (AfDB), an amount totalling N2.48
trillion (N360/$1).
According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) the nation’s
total public debts, consisting of external and domestic debts, stands at
N27.4 trillion as at 31st December 2019.
Rating agencies, Fitch, Moody’s and S&P Global had earlier
downgraded Nigeria’s ratings, with the latest of them Fitch, downgrading
the country’s ratings to sovereign credit rating (long-term, foreign
currency) by one notch from B+ to B, and maintained the negative
outlook.
According to the agencies, Nigeria faces the crashing oil price and
the coronavirus pandemic with limited, and shrinking external buffers.
Fitch’s numbers rest upon average oil prices of US$35/b this year and
US$45/b in 2021, and the CBN’s “continued reluctance to adjust the
exchange rate”.
According to the members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS), the
growing national debt is a cause for concern as the profile has grown
from N12.6 trillion in 2015 to N27.4 trillion at the end of 2019.
With oil prices trading below the 2020 budget benchmark, they noted
that in the 2020 budget, debt service commitment and recurrent spending
were beginning to crowd out capital expenditure, adding that the
trajectory was not consistent with the country’s national aspiration to
build infrastructure and a competitive economy.
The debt portfolio comprising state and federal debt stocks were
N9.02 trillion or 31.55 per cent of the debt was external while N18.37
trillion or 67.07 per cent of the debt was domestic.
Lagos state accounted for 10.82 per cent of the total domestic debt
stock, the highest while Yobe State has the least debt stock in this
category with a contribution of 0.71 per cent to the total domestic debt
stock.
According to the report, Nigeria’s total public debt portfolio as of
December 31, 2019, total external debt was N9.02 trillion ($27.67
billion) with a percentage of 32.93.
Break down showed that federal government debt instrument accounted
for N7.53 trillion ($23.11 billion) with a percentage of 27.50, states
and Federal Capital Territory (FCT) accounted for N1.48 trillion ($12.59
billion) with a percentage of 5.43.
A further breakdown of the NBS report showed that total domestic debt
stood at $56.37 billion at N18.37 trillion with a percentage of 67.07.
Federal government domestic debt stood atN14.27 trillion ( $43.78
billion) with a percentage of 52.09, with states and FCT contributing
N4.10 trillion ( $12.59 billion) with a percentage of 14.99.
The report showed that the total public debt is the addition of
external and domestic debt instruments for the year 2019, which was
N27.40 trillion ($84.05 billion).
This accounted for 100 per cent of both domestic and external debt instruments for the entire 2019.
If
Nigeria succeeds in borrowing the proposed $6.9bn from international
lenders including the World Bank, the African Development Bank and the
Islamic Development bank to help counteract thePages
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