In September 2022, the Debt Management Office (DMO) released its . It had risen to 鈧︹42.84 trillion ($103.31 billion) at the end of June 2022.
If you do the math, you鈥檇 notice that the exchange rate used is the ojoro one 鈥 the Central Bank of Nigeria鈥檚 (CBN) exchange rate. This stood around 鈧︹414 to the dollar at the time. , the rate had depreciated to 鈧︹436 to the dollar. Don鈥檛 even get us started on the black market rate. That鈥檚 when the true extent of Nigeria鈥檚 debt will leave you in tears.
On October 19, Oluseun Onigbinde, the director of BudgIT, a civic organisation that tracks public expenditure, raised the alarm . He said that 鈧︹20 trillion of Nigeria鈥檚 domestic debt would be at an 鈥渦nrealistic鈥 9% coupon rate, meaning that our debt servicing聽 would amount to 鈧1.8 trillion annually.
If all this sounds like I鈥檓 speaking Greek, let me break it down for you.
The debt profile problem
Nigeria鈥檚 debt profile can broadly be grouped into two: external and internal (domestic) debts. The can further be broken down into various categories. Multilateral debt, which is the type we owe to the IMF, World Bank and AfDB, bilateral debt, which is the type we owe to foreign countries, especially China, and others like commercial debts and .
The 鈧20 trillion that Mr Onigbinde was lamenting about is our , which is composed of different kinds of bonds and treasury bills, financed mostly by the CBN. Most of it came through advance, which ordinarily is something that鈥檚 used when the federal government has a budget deficit, that is, when money the government spends in a given year is more than than the revenue it receives.聽
In Nigeria, CBN鈥檚 statutes allow it to finance the government鈥檚 deficit at of no more than 5% of the previous year鈥檚 revenue. But trust the CBN to by financing the deficit by as high as 80% of revenue. In the CBN鈥檚 defense, it it鈥檚 the Federal Government that 鈥渇rustrates鈥 it by disregarding the limits it sets.
So while Sinzu and Spending are doing their thing, our debt profile keeps mounting.
Emefiele and Buhari [Image source: Punch]
Is Nigeria鈥檚 debt sustainable?
Debt, in itself, is not a bad thing. Global debt for instance surpassed in 2021. Who the world is owing is a question for another day. The real question with debt is whether it鈥檚 sustainable. , a country鈥檚 debt is considered sustainable if the government is able to meet all its current and future payment obligations without exceptional financial assistance or going into default.
This begs the question, is Nigeria鈥檚 debt sustainable? Well, the World Bank and IMF they would reassess Nigeria鈥檚 debt sustainability. In the meantime, these are the hard facts.聽聽
Nigeria is struggling with a very high unemployment rate. It鈥檚 also experiencing dwindling returns from oil, thanks to mismanagement and organised oil theft. The NLNG, another moneymaker for the economy, recently declared force majeure due to increased flooding. Even our sugar daddy, China, has .
When you add inflation, the depreciating naira, debt servicing, and an all-round struggling economy, it鈥檚 tough to imagine that we can still keep on accumulating more debt.
What鈥檚 a debt trap?
A debt trap describes a situation where a borrower is forced to take on new loans simply to repay existing ones. It occurs when debt obligations surpass one鈥檚 loan repayment capacity. Sound familiar?
Mr Onigbinde鈥檚 is that Nigeria will borrow an additional 鈧10 trillion. Foreign exchange and domestic loans will stand at 鈧4 trillion while the CBN prints 鈧6 trillion.
By 2027, we would have acquired another 鈧24 trillion in CBN debt and we would sell to the markets again, expanding debt servicing. Onigbinde calls it a 鈥渄isastrous loop鈥, economists call it a . We should ask our elected officials many questions before we enter one.




