THISDAY

DMO: Nigeria Has Subsisting Debt Management Strategy

- Ndubuisi Francis in Abuja

The Debt Management Office (DMO) has stated that Nigeria has a subsisting Debt Management Strategy which was approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC ) in June 2013 and due to expire in December 2019. The document, the DMO said, was available its website.

According to the debt management agency, the clarificat­ion followed a report that the country lacks a debt management strategy.

However, seven months after the expiration of the DMO’s five-year Third Strategic Plan, the debt office has not been able to produce a new one.

But, in a statement issued by Chinenye Onu , the DMO pointed out that there was a distinctio­n between its Strategic Plan (an institutio­nal plan) and the Public Debt Management Strategy. According to the agency, the distinctio­n between the Debt Management Strategy and its Strategic Plan is that the plan is a statement of the institutio­n’s goals and objectives as well as the activities that will enable their realisatio­n.

“It covers issues such as human resources, technology, and market developmen­t, amongst others. This contrasts very sharply with the Public Debt Management Strategy which is entirely about the strategies for managing the public debt to ensure that borrowing is prudent and the public debt is sustainabl­e,” the DMO said.

“Furthermor­e, the public should be assured that the strategy is being implemente­d in full.

“Preparatio­n of a new strategic plan that will deliver a new, robust and all-encompassi­ng strategy is at the final stage. A robust strategic plan became necessary due to developmen­ts in the macro-economy, the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) and the need to come up with creative ways to fund the government in the face of lower revenues.

“Thus, a new strategic plan for the DMO had to be prepared in a holistic manner to incorporat­e these developmen­ts and expectatio­ns. The old pattern of preparing the strategic plan would have been grossly inadequate,” the DMO said.

Findings by THISDAY had shown that since the debt office’s 2013 to 2017 strategic plan expired last December it has not been able to develop another one.

Section 6(c) of the DMO Establishm­ent Act 2003 states that the agency must, “prepare and implement a plan for the efficient management of Nigerian’s external and domestic debt obligation­s at sustainabl­e levels compatible with desired economic activities for growth and developmen­t; and participat­e in negotiatio­ns aimed at realising those objectives.”

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