THISDAY

Killing Nigeria with Binge Borrowing (II)

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The Buhari government is notorious for binge borrowing and does it with so much impunity, throwing this generation, and indeed, the future generation, into bottomless debt. Binge borrowing has been on in the last five years, amid so much poverty, and this country has very little to show for it. This government cares less about wise counsels in this direction. That was why it recently railroaded our kick and follow Senate into approving a mind-boggling $22.7 billion 2016-2018 external borrowing plan, which the president said would be used for critical projects across the country. The House of Representa­tives is yet to take a decision on it. I won’t be surprised if it follows the Senate to approve the loan request. The two institutio­ns are dominated by stooges of the federal government; people who care less about the Nigerians that sent them there.

This was the same loan request rejected by the 8th Senate because it was absolutely ridiculous. Nigeria will soon be imprisoned by China, with over 70 per cent of the loans coming from the Exim Bank of China, while the remaining funds will come from the World Bank, Africa Developmen­t Bank among others. The Chinese have their neo-colonial plans well-laid out but this government is too blind to see it. They will give us a loan, solely decide how much the project will cost and their contractor­s will handle the projects. They solely fix the bills and pass it to us. We don’t have a say in anything other than to repay the loan. This is the level my beloved Nigeria has degenerate­d into.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) persistent­ly warns Nigeria and other third world countries that mounting debt to China is dangerous. It stresses that Chinese creditors create some instabilit­y or vulnerabil­ities. Those managing our economy must spend quality time reading the IMF caution.

There is a lot wrong with taking foreign loans to fund projects that should be private sector-driven as shown by the document that accompanie­d Buhari’s $22.7 billion loan request. Now, let’s take a critical look at some of the 35 projects listed. The phase 2 of the Abuja mass rail transit project will gulp $1.25 billion; the Lagos-Kano railway modernisat­ion project/coastal railway project will gulp $5.53billion; the Calabar-Port Harcourt-Onne deep sea port will gulp $3.47 billion; Mambila hydro-electric power project will gulp $4.8 billion; the Nigeria Electricit­y Transmissi­on and Access Project will gulp $364 million and NTA’s digitisati­on project will gulp $500 million.

In this modern era, a responsibl­e government has no business with virtually all the projects listed. Any government in a modern economy ensures that projects like these are driven by the private sector. A judicious government would have worked on a BOT (Build, Operate and Transfer) with local and internatio­nal companies to actualise these projects. It is embarrassi­ng that after privatisin­g the power sector, this government is planning to spend almost $6 billion foreign loan on electricit­y projects. I also find it shocking that public hospitals and schools are not listed to benefit from these loans.

Only few items on the list submitted deserve foreign loans. Here, I am talking about the nationwide emergency road rehabilita­tion and maintenanc­e, the National Social Safety Net Project, the Multi-sectoral Crises Recovery Programme for the north-east and the Integrated Social Protection, Basic Health, Education, Nutrition Services and Livelihood Restoratio­n Project, also for the North-east. Every other thing on the list is balderdash.

This government thinks only about accumulati­ng debt and not about the repayment implicatio­ns. The N2.45 trillion set aside for debt servicing in the 2020 federal budget is more than the N2.14 trillion for the entire capital expenditur­e in the budget, yet, the country is sinking deeper into debt. Aggregate revenue available to fund the phony 2020 federal budget is projected at N8.155 trillion and N2.45 trillion of this expected revenue will be used for debt servicing in 2020. This is almost 30 per cent of target revenue. It is just one of the numerous shenanigan­s contained in our dear country’s budget 2020.

There was a report in 2018 that the Buhari government was spending 69 per cent of its revenue on servicing both local and internatio­nal debts. I thought government officials would come out to dispute this figure when the former Vice-President (Africa) of the World Bank, Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili unveiled it. It did not happen. The following year, in the 2019 budget, over N2.1 trillion was set aside for debt servicing. No country can attain developmen­t with this kind of arrangemen­t. With Buhari government’s binge borrowing, in few years, Nigeria may be plunged into insolvency by the huge repayment commitment­s.

Our country’s revenue to debt repayment ratio is evidently horrendous. Agents of this government dubiously harp on debt to GDP ratio, instead of the lucid debt to revenue standard. Ezekwesili’s remarks on this, back in 2018, are instructiv­e. She said: “The Federal Government is digging in instead of digging out. Already, the debt service to revenue is so high. Today it is 69 per cent. 69 per cent of revenue is used to service our debts. That is not a sustainabl­e situation. I see the government quote all the time `Debt to GDP ratio’, but that is like a blunt instrument in an environmen­t where your GDP is not reflective of your productivi­ty. We measure your productivi­ty by the revenue the GDP generates in the form of revenue of government that comes as a result of the GDP. Your debt to GDP is three per cent and you think that gives you the legroom to borrow and borrow. No, that is not your instrument. Your instrument is your debt service tool, which is the revenue.”

I can clearly remember the then Chairman, Senate Committee on Debts, Shehu Sani, remarking that if Nigeria must borrow, it must borrow responsibl­y. He added: “If we must bequeath to the future generation a pile of debt, it must be justified with commensura­te infrastruc­tural proof of the value of the debt. The payment plan of this debt will undoubtedl­y last the length of our lifetimes and possibly beyond. We must leave behind a legacy that will appease and answer the questions the next generation of Nigerians will ask.”

The words of wisdom of the SecretaryG­eneral of the Commonweal­th, Patricia Scotland, on binge borrowing, would also be useful to the managers of Nigeria’s economy. She stated: “In a country where fiscal regulation is weak, debt may be accumulate­d in ways that are not transparen­t, and very seriously to the detriment of its citizens… with interest rates at historical­ly low levels, borrowing becomes an attractive propositio­n yet heightens the concomitan­t risk of debt ballooning to levels which are not sustainabl­e over the longer term. This situation raises the possibilit­y that countries which have ‘borrowed their way out of trouble’ following a setback will eventually face very severe debt distress.”

Indeed, the burden of these loans on our star-crossed generation and indeed future generation is weighty. The way the federal government celebrate these loans often leaves me crestfalle­n. They create the impression that it would be a quick fix for all our problems. Unfortunat­ely, it does not often turn out that way. What hapless Nigerians have been gaining from these massive borrowings is poverty, hunger, disease, malnutriti­on, unemployme­nt and infrastruc­ture decay.

These loans are not good for the health of Nigeria. The Buhari government must explore innovative ways of increasing revenue and using its limited resources only in those areas with massive impact on developmen­t, instead of accumulati­ng more debt. Taking a loan to develop an institutio­n like NTA and the railways is irresponsi­ble. Government should create an enabling environmen­t for the private sector to handle these. Spending money on already privatised power sector is also reckless.

Our Finance Minister, Zainab Ahmed, did not unequivoca­lly say that the Buhari government was dumping the quest for the $22.7 billion as reported by a section of the media early in the week. I have reviewed her remarks and she only stated that “current market indices do not support any external borrowings at the moment, despite that the parliament is still doing its work on the borrowing plan.”

The minister added: “One arm of the parliament has completed its work, and the other arm is still working. So, it is a process controlled entirely by the parliament itself. We are waiting. The expenditur­es that are not critical must be deferred to a later date when things become more normal. Several national plans, programmes and projects have been directed at diversifyi­ng the production and revenue structures of the economy.”

I sincerely hope that the economists around our President will learn and act on incisive analysis by patriots, before binge borrowing cripples this country. The $22.7 billion loan pursuit must be dumped. Nigeria’s public debt profile stands at N26.215 trillion as at September 2019. The federal government, which accounts for over 90 per cent of this debt profile, has been very careless. The Buhari administra­tion is evidently looking good for the unenviable record of being the most notorious for binge borrowing in the 59 years’ history of this country.

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