Legacy debts
account for $3b of $5.5b new loan
The Minister
of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, may have declared that the country is
broke as
it cannot generate enough revenue to pay salaries of workers and still finance
capital projects.
Consequently,
the President Muhammadu Buhari administration has decided to embark on an
expansionary fiscal plan to be financed from external borrowings. Adeosun said
the country’s N19 trillion public debt was still sustainable and within the
threshold set for countries within Nigeria’s category.
The minister
reportedly made the declaration yesterday while speaking on the Arise
Television breakfast programme where she provided insight into the country’s
debt portfolio, with a particular reference to the new $5.5 billion line of
credit being sought by the Federal Government.
The
information is contained in a statement by the minister’s Media Assistant, Mr.
Olayinka Akintunde.
“The
government has adopted an expansionary fiscal policy with an enlarged budget
that will be funded in the short term, by borrowing,” the statement said,
indicating the country’s precarious liquidity situation.
Adeosun
revealed that the Federal Government would apply $3 billion in refinancing the
legacy debts of the immediate past government out of the $5.5 billion foreign
loan being sourced from the international financial markets.
“The
minister said the proposed $5.5 billion loan is made up of two components –
refinancing of heritage debts to the tune of $3billion and new borrowing of
$2.5 billion for the 2017 budget. The first component of $2.5 billion
represents new external borrowing provided for in the 2017 Appropriation Act to
part-finance the deficit in that budget.
“The
borrowing will enable the country to bridge the gap in the 2017 budget
currently facing liquidity problem to finance some capital projects,” the
statement added, confirming the fear that the country’s revenue situation is
not in good standing.
Only three
months ago, at a seminar organised by the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and
Fiscal Commission (RMAFC), Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, then acting president,
raised the alarm that the country’s revenue generated might not be able to fund
capital votes unless there was a minimum monthly revenue generation of N700
billion shared at the monthly Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC)
by the three tiers of government.
“For the
second component, we are refinancing existing domestic debt with the $3 billion
external borrowing. This is purely a portfolio restructuring activity that will
not result in any increase in the public debt,” Adeosun disclosed during the
programme.
According to
her, the country’s debt puzzlingly rose from N7.9 trillion in June 2013 to
N12.1 trillion in June 2015, despite the fact that only 10 per cent of the
budget was allocated to capital expenditure when oil price exceeded $120 per
barrel.
She noted
that the President Buhari-led administration was investing in critical
infrastructure such as roads, rails and power in order to deliver a fundamental
structural change to the economy that would reduce the nation’s exposure to
crude oil.
“Under this
dispensation, we are not borrowing to pay salaries. If all we do is to pay
salaries, we cannot grow the economy. This administration is also assiduously
working to return Nigeria to a stable economic footing. In the light of this,
the government adopted an expansionary fiscal policy with an enlarged budget
that will be funded in the short term, by borrowing,” Adeosun stated.
She
reassured that the $5.5 billion foreign borrowing is consistent with the
nation’s debt management strategy, whose main objective is to increase external
financing with a view to rebalancing the public debt portfolio in favour of
long-term external financing.
“Nigeria’s
debt to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) currently stands at 17.76 per cent and
compares favourably to all its peers. The debt to GDP ratio for Ghana is 67.5
per cent, Egypt is 92.3 per cent, South Africa (52 per cent), Germany (68.3 per
cent) and United Kingdom (89.3 per cent).
“Nigeria’s
debt to GDP ratio is still within a reasonable threshold. This administration
will continue to pursue a prudent debt strategy that is tied to gross capital
formation. This will be attained by driving capital expenditure in our ailing
infrastructure which will in turn, unlock productivity and create the
much-needed jobs and growth,” the minister added.
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