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Nigeria Hits A New Milestone With 83% of Revenue Spent on Debt Servicing in 2020

Nigeria Hits A New Milestone With 83% of Revenue Spent on Debt Servicing in 2020

The best part of Integrated Science in the junior secondary is the course on optics. Your teacher possibly used the word “mirage” as he/she explained optical illusion. Those days it was really cool, returning back to the village to “show off” before the non-initiated with big words from social science and integrated science. Today, you would be fine if you drop “mirage” for Nigeria’s economic strategy.

Yes, we hit a new milestone in 2020: 83% of revenue was spent on servicing debts: “total revenue earned in 2020 was N3.93 trillion representing a 27% drop from the target revenues of N5.365 trillion. However, debt service for the year was a sum of N3.26 trillion or 82.9% of revenue. Nigeria’s debt service cost of N3.26 trillion has now dwarfed the N1.7 trillion spent on capital expenditure of N1.7 trillion incurred in 2020.”

According to the data seen by Nairametrics, total revenue earned in 2020 was N3.93 trillion representing a 27% drop from the target revenues of N5.365 trillion. However, debt service for the year was a sum of N3.26 trillion or 82.9% of revenue.

Nigeria’s debt service cost of N3.26 trillion has now dwarfed the N1.7 trillion spent on capital expenditure of N1.7 trillion incurred in 2020. This is also the highest debt service paid by the Federal Government since we started tracking this data in 2009.

The total public debt (External and Domestic) balance carried by Nigeria as of September 2020 stood at N32.22 trillion ($84.57 billion). Included in the total debt is a domestic debt of about N15.8 trillion.

The experts at CSL Stockbrokers Limited explained the implication brilliantly: “The significantly higher recurrent component of the budget continues to drag the country’s economic growth, resulting in poor infrastructural development. Spending more on capital projects can promote industrialization, improve local purchasing power and help the federal government’s diversification drive.”

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I am apolitical and follow the facts, and I can tell you that no business in this world can survive on that debt service to revenue ratio. You can extrapolate that to any nation. In our land, any optimistic exuberance may be irrational because the avalanche of challenges are palpable, from severe pressures on dwindling oil revenues, limited  private investments, eroding consumer spending power, deteriorating currency, paralytic insecurity and declining foreign investor participation. Yet, Nigeria has the young people – and we still believe.

Because of these issues, some young Nigerians are trying alternative worlds as confident in the Naira drops. Nigeria has risen on cryptocurrency adoption. Yet, Swiss banks are sounding a warning that Bitcoin could make way just as Myspace made way for Facebook. In other words, it could wipe out anything people put in it if something new comes. So, there is risk everywhere and one thing we can hold is to make Naira resilient to avoid this possible risk on our young people.

“There is little in our view to stop a cryptocurrency’s price from going to zero when a better-designed version is launched or if regulatory changes stifle sentiment…..Netscape and Myspace are examples of network applications that enjoyed widespread popularity but eventually disappeared,” UBS strategist.

Fixing Nigeria will be challenging and the nation has to open new playbooks to make it happen. One construct which is evident is to get the National Identify Number (NIN) massively adopted so that we can deepen our credit system. Besides the credit system, NIN has the following use cases according to Nairametrics:

  • Voters card registration: NIN is now accepted as a means of identification for obtaining the Permanent Voters Card (PVC) in Nigeria.

  • Bank account opening and reactivation: NIN is being used to access a wide range of services in banks and the financial services industry, ranging from documentations for the opening of an account, means of identification for payment of second or third party cheques, to reactivation of dormant accounts.

  • Consular services at Nigerian embassies and missions: As a bonafide citizen of Nigeria, NIN is now being used as a means of identification to access a wide range of services at Nigerian Embassies and Missions abroad, amongst others.

  • International passport: The Nigeria Immigration Services has made NIN compulsory as a means of identification for anyone that wants to apply for fresh or renewal of international passports in Nigeria.

  • Driver’s license: It has become compulsory for anyone that wants to apply for or renew his or her driver’s license to show his or her NIN as a means of identification. According to the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), no vehicle registration or renewal can be done without providing NIN as part of its requirements – no waiver allowed.

  • Government-related jobs and grants/loans: Most government-related jobs cannot be secured without NIN as a vital means of identification. As a matter of fact, you even need to provide your NIN in the prescribed job forms to apply for the job.

  • Tertiary admissions: Most tertiary institutions, in addition to other means of identification, accept NIN for the processing of admissions and registrations of new students.

Nigeria needs to get into a working state. Yes, we need to move from inventive thinking into innovation thinking. Without making changes, Nigeria could experience a lost decade.

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1 THOUGHT ON Nigeria Hits A New Milestone With 83% of Revenue Spent on Debt Servicing in 2020

  1. Look at the faces of those doing everything possible to run Nigeria into ground, do they look sober at all? No! They are always smiling, wearing agbada and suits, that is how you know strange creatures and aliens.

    When you have enemies of the state running the state, it’s total destruction and plundering, it’s a super race to the bottom.

    The same 2020 where many nations were negotiating debt cancellation and restructuring, I guess all our creditors felt we are jokers, so none was willing to sign off even a kobo, you must pay every darn thing! But that doesn’t stop looters and thievery gang from clearing off anything that looks like money anyway, because no one fights for lady Nigeria.

    The overfed people will still be drawing their full remunerations, including ‘hardship allowances’, at least for putting the rest of their compatriots in excruciating and perpetual hardship.

    And when these ones finally die, we will be naming roads, institutions and trees after them? Nonsense!

    It will get to borrowing from individuals, with Aso Rock and National Assembly complex as collaterals, at least some of us will have chance to buy off those two structures and turn them into farmlands, because they won’t repay…

    The evil men do…

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