Nigeria total debt rose by N4.76tn in 2016, the Debt Management Office has disclosed.
The DMO disclosed this in its 2016 Annual Report and Statement of Accounts obtained by our correspondent in Abuja on Wednesday.
According to the office, Nigeria’s debt
as of December 2016 stood at N17.36tn, up from N12.6tn a year earlier.
This reflects an increase of N4.76tn or 37.74 per cent within a period
of one year.
The significant increase, according to
the DMO, is mainly in the domestic debt component and is attributable to
additional issuance of debt securities to fund the 2016 budget deficit
and the refinancing and redemption of matured securities.
The DMO explained that the increase in
borrowing could be looked at from the deficits contained in both the
2015 and 2016 budgets in relation to the Gross Domestic Product.
Thus, the deficit contained in the 2016
budget reflected 2.14 per cent of the GDP, while that of 2015 reflected
1.09 per cent of the GDP.
The report stated, “The total public
debt outstanding as of end of December 2016 was N17.36tn compared to
N12.6tn as of the end of December 2015. The significant increase was
mainly in the domestic debt stock, which was attributed to additional
issuances for the funding of the 2016 deficit and refinancing of matured
debt securities.
“The domestic stock has continued to
form a larger part of the total public debt stock since 2012. The bulk
of the stock of external debt continued to be in the long-term
category.”
It added, “The increase in public debt
stock was due to additional issuances for funding of the 2016 budget
deficit at a larger fiscal deficit of 2.14 per cent of GDP compared with
1.09 per cent in 2015, and refinancing/redeeming matured securities, as
well as the depreciation of the naira against the dollar a result of
the liberalisation of the exchange rate system.
“The external debt was $11.41bn or 20.04
per cent, while domestic debt was N13.88tn or 79.96 per cent. The
domestic debt stock comprised securitised Federal Government of Nigeria
debt of N11.06tn or 63.7 per cent as of December 2016 and domestic stock
of N2.82tn or 16.26 per cent for the 36 states and the Federal Capital
Territory.”
Given the high cost of servicing local
debts, the DMO indicated that the Federal Government intend to borrow
more from external sources in order to rebalance the ratio of domestic
to foreign borrowing.
It said, “In 2016, the government
continued to rely on borrowing mainly from multilateral and bilateral
sources on concessional terms to finance public development programmes,
by addressing critical infrastructure needs, and rebalance the total
debt portfolio, so as to achieve the optimal debt portfolio composition
of 60:40 for domestic and external debts, respectively in the
medium-term.
“In line with the new debt management
strategy, there would be a shift of focus to external borrowing,
including the international capital market, as a way of diversifying
government’s funding sources, reducing debt service costs and creating
opportunities for other domestic economic agents to access external
financing.”
The report stated that the stock of
external debt by remaining maturity was mainly long-term, adding that
the increase in net inflow of funds was largely on account of additional
disbursement from multilateral and bilateral sources.

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