Tag: debt management office

  • FG To Continue Borrowing Despite Rise In Revenue

    FG To Continue Borrowing Despite Rise In Revenue

    Despite the appreciable rise in revenue, the Federal Government has insisted that borrowing remains necessary to fund key policies.

     Finance Minister Wale Edun and Budget Minister Atiku Bagudu disclosed this at a recent Senate meeting, where they outlined plans for managing Nigeria’s fiscal challenges in the coming years.

    Edun recognized the improvements in the country’s revenue collection but emphasized that these gains would not be enough to fully fund the government’s ambitious development agenda.

    He noted that additional loans would be required to support a range of initiatives, including infrastructure projects and essential social services such as healthcare and education.

    In particular, Edun highlighted the need for borrowing to address social safety nets designed to assist the most vulnerable Nigerians. 

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    He stressed that the government’s borrowing strategy would be aimed at ensuring sustainable economic growth, with a clear focus on meeting both immediate and long-term needs.

    Bagudu, for his part, pointed out that the government’s borrowing plans are designed to cover a deficit in the ₦35.5 trillion 2024 budget, which includes provisions for tackling poverty and promoting economic productivity. 

    He also referenced Nigeria’s long-term development goals, including increasing the GDP per capita to $33,000 by 2050, a vision that will require careful financial planning and, at least in the short term, more borrowing.

    While this strategy reflects the government’s determination to push forward with its development goals, it also raises concerns about the sustainability of Nigeria’s increasing national debt and the potential impact on future generations.

    Analysts argue that such borrowing must be committed to funding projects with capacity for repaying the loans.

  • VAT, vassal states and restructuring (2)

    VAT, vassal states and restructuring (2)

    THERE are too many things wrong with the regime of Nigeria’s president, Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu. For 18 months since the advent of the administration, it has been a case of stumbling from one problem to the other. The tragedy is that almost all the challenges that this regime has been grappling with were self-inflicted. It started off with an ill-conceived petrol subsidy removal, and it followed that almost immediately with allowing the national currency, the Naira, to be floated.

    Both policies turned out to be disastrous because the so-called petrol subsidy payment persisted in an opaque manner, and subsidizing the Naira did abate. Recently, the state oil corporation, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) insisted that it will continue to import petroleum products in spite of the existence of a domestic producer, Dangote Refinery and Petrochemical Company, Lagos, which said that it has the capacity to satisfy domestic consumption for petroleum products. Dangote’s 650,000 barrels of crude oil per day production should on full stream produce 50 million litres of petrol and 15 million litres of diesel per day.

    Experts estimate that petrol consumption in Nigeria should not exceed 35 million litres per day. But corruption puts it much higher, sometimes for as high as 70 million litres per day. This outrageous figure is not strange because Nigeria is widely acknowledged as a crime scene – a country hurting in the hands of its supposed care-givers. Private importers who work at the behest of collaborators inside the government have been known to ‘import’ shiploads of petroleum products without the ships being sited anywhere near the country’s territorial waters, not to talk of discharging any products. But such ‘importers’ file claims with excellent shipping documents, and collect hundreds of millions of dollars from the public treasury. NNPCL does the same.

    Then a cartel hijacks the little litres of petrol that were in truth brought in, ferrying such to neighbouring countries in 33000-litre trucks and in broad daylight where they make a kill. Nigeria has clearly delineated borders with its neighbours. We have all manner of tax-payer paid government officials at those borders. But the trade booms. Currently, an investigative reporter has been reporting on the daily massive smuggling of 50kg bags of rice into the country with the active involvement of immigration top shots. He has been doing so with video evidence. Last week the journalist reported that the leader of the smugglers was accorded a red carpet reception at the Abuja headquarters of the Nigeria Immigration Service. His reports have not been disputed and nothing has happened to the economic saboteurs.

    Back to the issue at hand. Alhaji Tinubu takes responsibility for his misadventures on petrol and Naira. Almost two years since his hare-brained twin policies, market forces are yet to fully determine the prices of petroleum products and the price of the Naira. Whilst the NNPCL moderates the prices of petroleum products especially petrol by importing and fixing different pump head prices for different parts of the country, the Central Bank defends the Naira through regular sales of the United States dollars to the bureaux de change, and through the aggressive mopping up of  Naira in circulation. The policies are obviously not working. The price of petrol at over N1000/litre is not sustainable. It has ruined the economy and will inflict more damage with the regime’s insistence that it will stay the course. Nigerian families are worse off. Bloomberg, an American news organization reported last week that about two -third of Nigerian households can barely manage to feed once a day. And the quality of the meal is suspect. Their report was drawn from the latest statistics from the Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    The irony right now is that there are claims that the country is turning the corner, and that good days are on the horizon. Tinubu says so. The central bank governor says the same. Finance minister who is also the coordinating minister for the economy sees the same signs of economic recovery. Even the national security adviser, yes the NSA, who should have his hands full with widespread insecurity pervading the land, parrots the same message of visible economic turn around. But they are the only people who see economic recovery on the horizon. And they all share one thing in common – they all binge on the public treasury. I wager that none of them had been to a gas station to buy either petrol for the government SUVs (armour- plated and bomb-resistant brands) that they are driven in or to purchase diesel to fire government – owned electricity generators in their residences which also are built and tastefully furnished with taxpayers money.

    It is not strange, therefore, that they are separated from reality and the daily grind of the majority of Nigerians. The case of the NSA is particularly painful and pathetic. Daily, he joins the security agencies including the secret police otherwise called the Directorate of State Services (DSS), the regular Police, the Civil Defence Corps, the Armed Forces, among others, to run political commentaries on the state of the country. In place of combating insecurity, what the NSA does is to warn non-state agents terrorizing Nigeria to know that Tinubu is not known to lose any battle. Is he for real? The man cannot be, and should not be, a national security adviser even in a banana republic. What our rulers are doing is beyond talking up the economy, they are deliberately deceiving Nigerians. Any sign of economic recovery must show in the living standards and living conditions of the people. Today’s reality is that about 20 million children are out of school and about 150 million Nigerians are grappling with dimensional poverty. Of course, our country has been the poverty capital of the world since 2019.

    If nothing good is happening in the country, and nothing good has really happened in Nigeria in the last 18 months, it is down to the fact that the majority of Nigerians do not trust the regime headed by Tinubu. He assumed office about two years ago with a fractured mandate. And since then he has proceeded to surround himself with people like himself (people with real and perceived blemishes), and those who speak and dress like him. He is enmeshed in policy somersaults. At every turn he puts the cart before the horse. His regime is wobbly, fumbling and floundering. And because the regime perceives itself as fragile and unstable and unsure in spite of its attempt at blustering, it now sees treason in every spoken word by non-regime supporters, in every action and inaction, and in every news story and editorial opinions of some publications. The point is that the more this regime sees enemies everywhere, the more it will retreat to itself, and the more eventually it will begin to crack down on imaginary detractors. Already, for the diminishing clan of regime choristers, anybody who opposes where Tinubu is taking the country is treated as not being patriotic. To their warped minds they equate patriotism with love for a serially bungling administration. They are not capable of putting country before party or ethnic affiliations or fleeting benefits from the rulers.

    Expectedly, the gulf between the people and the regime is widening and it is beginning to play out. It’s manifesting in the new tax bills before our supine national assembly. For a start, the tax bills are one year late in coming. It is the style of the regime – to make policy statements without even a draft of the working papers. It did the same thing with the student loans scheme and conditional cash transfer to the poor of the poor in the country, to mention but two. Often its pronouncements bear no relationship with reality. The administration at Inception said it would reduce dependence on loans to run the government. That avowal may have informed what was thought to be the urgency it would attach to the tax bills. It failed. Now that the regime has roused itself from slumber, ‘enemies’ have laid ambush for the bills.

    Except for a segment of the Yoruba nation, every other nation in Nigeria is now increasingly inclined to live like “onye ndiro gbara ugburu gburu n’eche ndu ya nche mgbenile” or eternal vigilance is the price for liberty. With the antecedents of Tinubu other component-nations of the country will only treat his tax bills with levity to their eternal damnation. The first thing that should set the alarm bells ringing is the composition of the team that crafted and superintended the making of the bills. They look like Tinubu. They bear similar names like his. They dress and speak like him. So why should he and his parochial team be trusted to be altruistic in the work they have done? Other nations within Nigeria have a right to suspect these tax bills because, so far, Tinubu has demonstrated that he is an ethnic bigot.

    It came as  no surprise, therefore, that a section of the north of Nigeria was the first to scream that the tax bills were not the ‘Hail Mary’ that the regime claimed that they were. Senator Ali Ndume cried foul and vowed that the bills would be killed in the national assembly. Though a member, Ndume must be mistaken if he believes that the country still has a parliament worthy of that name. This assembly is an extension of the Executive arm. I didn’t say so, the leadership of the assembly said so from the get-go. And they have not disappointed. Indeed the national assembly members commenced consideration of the money bills last year by first singing the personal anthem of Tinubu “On your mandate we shall stand…” Anybody who expected any better from such buffoons who masquerade as lawmakers must be living in a fool’s paradise. Then the national economic council (NEC) composed of the vice president  and governors advised Tinubu to withdraw the bills to allow further stakeholders’ consultations. Tinubu promptly and derisively dismissed them. The controversy and the insistence of the president to forge ahead have alerted the other nations. The south east governors forum, for instance, was reported to have set up an expert team to review the bills for possible boobytraps.

    The one bill in the basket of bills that has attracted much attention was the value added tax (VAT). Some experts and indeed non-experts are concerned that the president and his kinsmen tax team are up to some mischief. They have honed in on two words concerning the VAT bill – Attribution and Derivation – which of them should enjoy preeminence. Among other people, one writer attempted to highlight where the bodies were buried in the VAT bill. We will reproduce part of his exertion. The person who identified himself as Chris Okafor on WhatsApp wrote: “.. the truth is (that) tax experts filled with Tinubu’s apologists (and 90% of Nigerians of Yoruba extraction) worked on the bill and hid so much into the bill which will put Lagos and Ogun (states) into economic advantage slightly short of extortion of other states” of Nigeria. He argued that from the present structure of the VAT bill, 60% of the takings will go to the state of collection. His grouse was that a disproportionate amount of VAT proceeds will go to the states hosting the head offices of companies that produce ‘vatable’ goods and services even when the same goods and services were patronized in other states of the country. He illustrated with some companies saying, for instance, that if VAT of N500 million was collected from a branch of a company in one state, 60% of the collection under the proposed principle of derivation would go to the state hosting the headquarters of that company and not in the state where the product/service was consumed.

    There’s little doubt that an arrangement such as illustrated above will make some areas of the country vassal states. It will sow seeds of discord and discontent. VAT is a sales tax and so components of the federating units of the country should be legally empowered to collect and use consumption tax. Another allegation that should be concerning is the yet to be verified claim that there’s a provision in one of the tax bills that would empower the federal government to take a certain percentage of funds that drop into personal and corporate bank accounts. We align with the national economic council that more time should be allowed for further scrutiny of these tax bills. We do not presently have a national assembly, and the claim by the Executive that the assembly should be allowed to scrutinize the bills on our behalf is gratuitous. Our so-called representatives and senators are preoccupied looking out for themselves.

    It’s accepted that we operate an ugly and difficult to decipher federal system of government, but 25 years and counting, we must summon the will to begin to put processes and structures in place to approximate a federation. The ruling elite has a bounden duty to work harder to smoothen the rough edges which combined forces could lead to the implosion of Nigeria. They should see the Nigerian project as bigger than their personal and/or regional interests. And if this perceived skewed VAT distribution is part of the ongoing restructuring in the image and likeness of Tinubu, it may not bode well for this country that for all intents and purposes is tottering on the edge of the cliff. The allegation that bank deposits may be taxed by the government could just prove to be the trigger for national cataclysm. Who wants this?

    *Concluded.

    UGO ONUOHA Was the Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief, Champion Newspapers Limited

  • Nigeria’s Economy Sees Robust Growth in Q3, 2024

    Nigeria’s Economy Sees Robust Growth in Q3, 2024

    The Nigerian economy has experienced an appreciable 0.27 percent expansion, hitting 3.46% in Q3 instead of 3.19% it averaged in Q2 of 2024.

    Latest data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on reveals a consistent upward trend in the economy, surpassing the growth rate of 2.54% seen in Q3 2023. 

    Additionally, the current quarter also outperformed Q2, 2024, which had seen a growth of 3.19%.

    In real terms, the GDP stood at N20.1 trillion, reflecting an increase from N18.2 trillion in Q2 2024 and N19.4 trillion in Q3 2023. 

    The services sector played a crucial role in this performance, driving growth with a 5.19% increase and contributing 53.58% of the total GDP.

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    The data further revealed that the nominal GDP for Q3 2024 reached N71.1 trillion, marking a 17.26% increase from N60.6 trillion in the same quarter of the previous year.

     This surge signifies a robust recovery and positive economic momentum.

    Among the key sectors driving the economy, crop production contributed 26.51%, trade accounted for 14.78%, and telecommunications made up 13.94%. 

    The oil sector also showed improvement, recording a 5.17% growth compared to a negative growth rate of -0.85% in Q3 2023, although it was slightly lower than the 10.15% increase seen in Q2 2024.

    Nigeria’s oil output for Q3 2024 stood at an average of 1.47 million barrels per day (mbpd), marking a slight increase from 1.45 mbpd in the same quarter of the previous year and surpassing the 1.41 mbpd recorded in Q2 2024.

    Despite a strong performance in the oil sector, the non-oil economy remains the dominant driver of Nigeria’s GDP, contributing 94.43% in Q3 2024. 

    The non-oil sector’s contribution has slightly decreased compared to 94.52% in Q3 2023, though it remains higher than the 94.30% seen in Q2 2024. Key areas like agriculture, trade, and services have fueled this growth.

  • Tinubu Seeks NASS Approval for N1.77tn External Loan

    Tinubu Seeks NASS Approval for N1.77tn External Loan

    Nigeria sinks deeper into the debt trap as President Bola Tinubu submits a request to the National Assembly to approve additional N1.77trillion external borrowing. 

    A communication from the Presidency states the loan shall be used to cover and portion of the N9.7 trillion deficit plan for 2024.

    During Tuesday’s plenary, the Speaker read the president’s request, which also included the MTEF/FSP 2025-2027 and a bill to amend the National Social Investment Programme. 

    The proposed amendment aims to centralize the social register as the primary tool for welfare program implementation.

    Meanwhile, the Central Bank of Nigeria reported that Nigeria’s foreign debt servicing costs climbed by nearly 40% in the first nine months of 2024, amounting to $3.58 billion, up from $2.56 billion in 2023. 

    The country’s rising debt obligations are becoming more expensive, driven partly by fluctuating exchange rates, with January 2024 witnessing a dramatic surge in payments.

    In related developments, the debt of Nigeria’s 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory reached N11.47 trillion by June 2024, a 14.57% increase from December 2023. 

    The devaluation of the naira significantly contributed to the growth of the external debt, which rose to $4.89 billion, up from $4.61 billion. Domestic debt, however, saw a decline.

    The rising debt figures across the country reflect the growing fiscal pressures faced by both the federal and state governments, highlighting the need for sustainable economic management strategies.

  • Each Nigerian Owes N619,501 as Debt Profile Hits N134 Trillion  

    Each Nigerian Owes N619,501 as Debt Profile Hits N134 Trillion  

    Nigeria’s ever surging debt hits N134.297 trillion as of last June, dragging each citizen into a N619,501 debt burden without much to show for it.

    Nigeria’s Debt Management Office (DMO) reports that the figure stems from Nigeria’s total public debt, which surged to N134.297 trillion by the end of June 2024.  

    With the country’s population estimated at 216.7 million by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the debt burden per capita reflects the mounting financial strain on citizens. 

    This amount is equivalent to nine times the newly approved minimum wage of N70,000.  

    A breakdown of the debt reveals that domestic liabilities stand at N71.2 trillion, while external obligations amount to N63 trillion. 

    The federal government accounts for a significant portion, with domestic debt at N66.9 trillion and external debt at N55.8 trillion. State governments owe a combined N11.3 trillion.  

    The N134 trillion debt figure represents a N13 trillion increase since March 2024, raising concerns about the country’s growing dependence on borrowing to finance its operations.

  • DMO auctions FGN bonds worth N360bn

    The Debt Management Office (DMO), acting on behalf of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN), has recently conducted an auction for the subscription of four FGN bonds valued at a total of N360 billion for the month of August 2023.

    As outlined in the offer circular released by the DMO on Thursday, the first bond on offer is an April 2029 FGN bond, with a value of N90 billion and an interest rate of 14.55 percent per annum.

    This particular bond constitutes a 10-year re-opening of the existing issue. Similarly, the second bond available for subscription is a June 2033 FGN bond, also valued at N90 billion, and carrying an interest rate of 14.70 percent per annum, serving as a 10-year reopening.

    Furthermore, the DMO has presented a June 2038 FGN bond, valued at N90 billion, with an interest rate of 15.45 percent per annum. This bond represents a 15-year reopening of a previous issuance.

    The last offering is the June 2053 FGN bond, also valued at N90 billion, and featuring an interest rate of 15.70 percent per annum. This bond represents a 30-year reopening of the original issuance.

    “They qualify as securities in which trustees can invest under the Trustee Investment Act

    “They qualify as government securities within the meaning of the Company Income Tax Act and Personal Income Tax Act for tax exemption for pension funds amongst other investors.

    “They are listed on the Nigerian Exchange Limited and FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange.

    “All FGN bonds qualify as liquid assets for liquidity ratio calculation for banks,” the DMO said. 

    All of the mentioned FGN bonds are available for subscription at a unit cost of N1,000, with a minimum subscription requirement of N50 million and subsequent subscriptions in multiples of N1,000.

    For bonds that are re-openings of previously issued bonds with fixed coupons, bidders are expected to pay a price corresponding to the yield-to-maturity bid that successfully clears the auction volume, along with any accrued interest on the instrument.

    Interest on these bonds is paid semi-annually, and the principal repayment is set as a bullet payment due on the maturity date. It’s noteworthy that FGN bonds enjoy the full backing of the Federal Government’s faith and credit, with their security secured by the general assets of Nigeria.

    These FGN bonds have multiple benefits, including qualification as securities in which trustees can invest under the Trustee Investment Act. They also fall under the category of government securities in accordance with the Company Income Tax Act and Personal Income Tax Act, qualifying for tax exemptions for pension funds and other investors.

    Additionally, these bonds are listed on both the Nigerian Exchange Limited and the FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange. Furthermore, all FGN bonds are considered liquid assets for the calculation of liquidity ratios for banks.

    The DMO’s auction of these FGN bonds reflects the government’s continued efforts to manage its debt and financial obligations while providing investment opportunities for both institutional and retail investors.

  • DMO bags 3 EMEA awards, recommits to innovative debt strategies

    Nigeria’s Debt Management Office (DMO), has renewed its commitment to continue delivering innovative and comprehensive debt management strategies.

    In a statement signed by DMO’s Director-General Patience Oniha on Friday, the agency’s commitment to the fulfillment of its mandate has placed it on solid footing in the EMEA region and beyond.

    The DMO received three prestigious EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) Finance Achievement Awards recently in London.

    While commending EMEA Finance for recognizing the work it was doing, she said the Office’s success has been down to its commitment to provide tailored debt management solutions to Nigeria.

    “As the DMO celebrates these remarkable achievements, it renews its commitment to continue delivering innovative and comprehensive debt management strategies, further solidifying its standing in the EMEA region and beyond,” she said.

    She said the awards are a recognition of DMO’s unwavering commitment to implementing effective debt management strategies in the emerging markets region encompassing EMEA.

    “The awards, bestowed by EMEA Finance, which is renowned in the emerging markets, highlight the outstanding performance of DMO in managing debt and optimising financial resources across diverse markets.

    “The accolades serve as a validation of the DMO’s tireless efforts in providing innovative solutions to meet the challenges of debt management in the ever-evolving economic climate.

    “Receiving these accolades mark a significant milestone for DMO, as it solidifies its position as a leading player in the field of debt management within the EMEA region,” she said.

    The three awards include: “Best Sovereign Borrower”; “Best Sovereign Bond in EMEA”; and “Best Local Currency Bond in EMEA’’.

  • Budget deficits, low revenue responsible for rising debt – DMO

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) says decades of operating budget deficits by successive governments is responsible for Nigeria’s high debt profile.

    The Director-General of the DMO, Patience Oniha, said this on Sunday in Abuja.

    According to Oniha, a review of Nigeria’s fiscal data shows that not only has the government operated budget deficits which have been growing, but most of the deficits have been funded through local and external borrowing.

    “The records show that deficits in the annual budgets, including supplementary budgets rose to N10.78 trillion in 2023 from N1.62 trillion in 2015.

    “Between 82 per cent and 99 per cent of these were funded by new borrowing which ranged from N1.46 trillion in 2015 to N8.80 trillion in 2023.

    “These facts confirm that these budget deficits, funded by new borrowings, have been responsible for the rapid growth in the debt stock and the resultant increases in debt service,” she said.

    According to Oniha, this trend could have been avoided or at least moderated if revenues had been higher or expenditures lower.

    She tasked the incoming government of Sen. Bola Tinubu to take cognisance of the situation and prioritise increased revenue generation.

    “The budget deficits would have been much smaller, or Nigeria would have operated on a balanced budget.

    “It is therefore imperative that the incoming government takes into account the perennial budget deficits in the preparation of the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (2024 – 2026) and the 2024 budget.

    “The government should also accelerate the growth in revenues to ensure debt sustainability,” she said.