The Guardian (Nigeria)

Amount spent on debt servicing killing economy, CSOS lament

- From Sodiq Omolaoye, Abuja

CIVIL Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre ( CISLAC) and Tax Justice and Governance Platform have decried the amount spent on debt servicing in the country, citing it as responsibl­e for current economic challenges.

Addressing journalist­s in Abuja, Executive Director of CISLAC, Auwal Musa Rafsanjani, said debt service was allotted N8.25 trillion and that the President ambitiousl­y projected debt servicing at 45 per cent of total income.

Stressing the need for the government to reduce its dependency on internatio­nal, especially private creditor borrowings, Rafsanjani said borrowing accounted for about 60 per cent of the yearly debt servicing cost prioritisi­ng concession­al loans, in adherence to legal stipulatio­ns.

He said the current economic situation in Nigeria, characteri­sed by dwindling government revenues and escalating public debt, demanded immediate and strategic interventi­ons.

He noted that as of December 2022, 80 per cent of Nigeria’s total revenue was dedicated to that purpose. “The new government on its part has commended itself for allocating more funding to social services in its 2024 budget. However, the country will spend six times more on servicing debts than on building new schools and hospitals in 2024.

“In its N28 trillion 2024 budget, the pattern of bloated recurrent spending, new borrowings and unsustaina­ble debt servicing costs still persist,’’ he said.

According to him, the government’s persistent reliance on borrowing and the loss of substantia­l revenue through tax expenditur­es have compounded the challenges.

In his remarks, Executive

Director, Extractive 360, Juliet Ukanwosu, said the Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning, and related agencies should enhance revenue generation by expanding the tax net, improving tax compliance and revising tax incentives.

Ukanwosu said exploring revenue streams such as carbon taxes, in line with progressiv­e taxation principles would augment government income.

She recommende­d: “Review all the existing tax expenditur­es and criteria for such benefit, including but not limited to Pioneer status, contributi­on to economy.

 ?? PHOTO: NAN ?? President of Angola- Nigeria Business Council ( ANBC), Fifi Ejindu ( left); former President, Olusegun Obasanjo; and Angolan Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr Jose Bamoquina Zau, during a news conference on Angola- Nigeria Diplomatic Business Forum in Lagos… at the weekend.
PHOTO: NAN President of Angola- Nigeria Business Council ( ANBC), Fifi Ejindu ( left); former President, Olusegun Obasanjo; and Angolan Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr Jose Bamoquina Zau, during a news conference on Angola- Nigeria Diplomatic Business Forum in Lagos… at the weekend.

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