By Femi Adekoya, and Victor Uzoho
Still struggling to deal with the impact of the coronavirus on their
economies, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), has said Nigeria and
other countries in the sub-Saharan African (SSA) region
would need
additional financing needs of over $110 billion.
Of this $110 billion and approved loans, the IMF insisted that the
countries still have $44 billion financing gap to fill. Noting that many
citizens are informal workers and typically have few savings and
limited access to finance, the IMF ruled out further considerations of
lockdown to check the pandemic, saying that effort complicates the
authorities’ hard work to maintain an effective lockdown.
The recent Senate’s approval of President Muhammadu Buhari’s $5.513
billion loan request bumped Nigeria’s external debt profile to $33.18
billion, representing over 90 per cent of its foreign reserves.
According to the Organised Private Sector (OPS), rather than
exploring fiscal reforms that would aid productivity, diversification
and stimulate private sector’s contribution to the economy, the
government continues to explore the easy approach to financing its
budget.
Beyond fiscal reforms, the private sector argued that tenor of any
loan repayment by any administration should be limited within the life
of that administration to check debt accumulation for future generation.
According to the Joint World Bank-IMF Debt Sustainability Framework
for Low-Income Countries released earlier, a country’s debt service to
revenue threshold should not exceed 23%. With debts remaining
unsustainable, the government might have no choice than to increase its
revenues or face further spending cuts.
In its latest regional outlook tagged, “Sub-Saharan Africa: A
Cautious Reopening,” the IMF commended fiscal efforts embarked by the
countries in the region, but noted that they should gradually shift from
broad fiscal support to more affordable, targeted policies;
concentrating in particular on the poorest households and those sectors
hit hardest by the crisis.
Notwithstanding the home-grown solutions deployed by many countries,
the IMF expressed worry that around 90 per cent of non-agricultural
employment is in the informal sector, where participants are usually not
covered by the social safety net.
Urging other institutions to assist the region, the IMF said: “This
crisis is unprecedented. Our members need us now more than ever. And our
efforts today will have significant consequences down the road, not
only in helping our members offset the immediate tragedy of the crisis,
but also in ensuring that peoples’ lives and livelihoods are not
destroyed forever.
“In response, many authorities have done what they can to temporarily
expand their safety nets; using home-grown, often innovative approaches
to ensure that transfers reach as much of their population as possible.
But again, resources are limited, and these efforts cannot hope to
offset the full impact of this crisis.”
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