The total debt of the Federal Government and the 36 states of the
federation as well as the Federal Capital Territory now stands at
N10.84trn, the Debt Management Office has said.
Statistics
obtained from the DMO in Abuja on Monday showed that the total debt as
of September 30 is higher than the total debt of the country as of
September 30, 2013 by 30.29 per cent.
As of September 30, 2013, the
total debt of the three tiers of government stood at N8.32trn. This,
however, excluded the domestic debt of the states which was included in
the current debt status of the country.
Details of the current
debt status of the country showed that the external debts of both the
Federal and state government stood at $9.52bn or N1.48trn.
As of
September 30, the domestic debt stock of the Federal Government alone
stood at $49.12bn or N7.65trn. The domestic debt of states, on the other
hand, stood at $10.97bn or N1.71trn.
In comparison, the external
debt of both the federal and state governments stood at N1.28trn (or
$8.26bn) as of September 30, 2023. Also, the domestic debt of the
Federal Government a year ago stood at N7.03trn.
Dissecting the
Federal Government’s current domestic debt of N7.65trn by instruments,
the Federal Government Bond contributed N4.6trn or 60.12 per cent to the
profile; Nigerian Treasury Bills contributed N2.74trn or 35.76 per cent
while Treasury Bonds contributed N315.39bn or 4.12 per cent.
As of June 2014, out of a total external debt of $3.01bn owed by the states, the Lagos State Government owed $1.02bn.
Other
major holders of the country’s external sub-national debts included
Kaduna State which owes $245.51m and Cross Rivers State, $120.21m.
Others are Ogun State, $116.69m; Bauchi State, $111.61m; and Oyo State,
$80.11m.
The states least exposed to foreign debts included
Borno, $16.07m; Plateau, $22.99m; Taraba, $24.06m; Delta, $24.7m and
Benue, $28.79m.
However, in comparison to the nation’s total
external indebtedness, the states owed only 32.13 per cent; leaving the
Federal Government with 67.87 per cent.
Loans from China Export
Import Bank and monies raised from Eurobond accounted for $2.54bn of the
Federal Government’s $6.36bn external debt while multilateral sources
accounted for $3.82bn.
As of June 2013, the nation’s total
external loan stood at $6.92bn. This means that over a period of one
year, the country’s external debt rose by $2.46bn showing 35.51 per cent
increase.
The growth of the nation’s debt stock can be seen in
the budget for debt servicing. The Federal Government plans to spend
N2.08tn servicing the country’s debt within the next three years.
The
figures for debt servicing as well as the county’s debt stock are
contained in the Medium Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy
Paper of the Federal Government.
The document stated that while
N591.76bn was utilised in servicing the nation’s debt in 2013, the sum
of N712bn, N684bn and N684bn would be used for the 2014, 2015 and 2016
fiscal periods respectively.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment