Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, has dismissed the insinuation that Nigeria is broke and finds it difficult to meet its financial obligations.
Ahmed spoke on Thursday at the presentation of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration scorecard (2015-2023).
The minister’s comments came amid criticism of the Buhari administration for huge borrowings believed to have sapped the country’s coffers dry.
Statistics from the Central Bank of Nigeria’s website showed that the federal Government’s debt through Ways and Means’ rose from N17.5 trillion in December 2021 to N23.8 trillion in October 2022 — an increase of N6.3 trillion in 10 months.
The borrowings are currently not included in the country’s total public debt stock (federal and state governments) which currently stands at N42.84 trillion.
In July, the cost of servicing debt surpassed the Federal Government’s retained revenue by N310 billion in the first four months of 2022.
Ahmed had said this while presenting the 2022 fiscal performance report for the period that the Federal Government’s total revenue was N1.63 trillion, while debt service gulped N1.94 trillion.
She said urgent action was required to address “revenue underperformance and expenditure efficiency at national and sub-national levels”.
Akinwumi Adesina, president of the African Development Bank (AfDB), in his analysis of Nigeria’s debt profile, said the external debt levels stood at N16.61 trillion or $40 billion.
He concluded that “Nigeria needs help to tackle this debt burden”.
However, during her presentation of Buhari’s scorecard on Thursday, Ahmed said Nigeria has not in anyway defaulted in its both domestic and foreign debt repayments, adding that the country is not opting for debt relief.
The minister noted thhat the country continued to disburse funds to the three tiers of government from the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC).
She said the Federal Government had since 2015 disbursed N5.04 trillion to state governments, disclosing that the non-oil sector drives the country’s economy more than the oil sector owing to vandalism of infrastructure.
Ahmed further said oil production is increasing, stressing that as at October 2022, it soared to 1.4 million barrels per day.
She also said N1.7 trillion was released for this year’s capital projects as of September 2022.
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