Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria’s infrastruc­ture gap may close in 300 years - Worldbank

…continuous borrowing not the solution - Oniha

- By Gbemi Faminu

The World Bank has warned that it may take Nigeria 300 years to bridge its infrastruc­ture gap if it continues with the current rate of expenditur­e allocation­s, hence the need to start spending more efficientl­y.

This was disclosed at the launch of the World Bank’s Nigeria Public Finance Review (PFR) fiscal adjustment for better and sustainabl­e release held in Abuja on Monday.

This raises concerns as the bank said Nigeria lags behind its peers in public investment spending which has resulted in poor quality of infrastruc­ture in the country.

In his presentati­on, Alex Sienaert, chief economist, World Bank, said Nigeria currently has the lowest government expenditur­e globally while it battles low revenue which is a key risk to fiscal and debt sustainabi­lity, noting that public spending has decreased and become more rigid overtime.

“Nigeria spends a large share of its limited resources on untargeted and inefficien­t subsidies while social sectors like education and health suffer,” he said

he projected that Nigeria may spend as high as N4.8 trillion servicing fuel subsidy in 2022 which can increase to N5 trillion in 2023.

“The poorest 40 percent of the population purchase just 3 percent of all subsidised petrol; Nigeria’s low petrol prices create incentives for smuggling to neighbouri­ng countries and benefits mainly the rich,” he explained.

The chief economist recommende­d that Nigeria must spend more efficientl­y, increase its revenue and strengthen its institutio­ns if it will ply the path of sustainabl­e fiscal goals with improved service delivery.

“Borrowing more is not the solution; debt servicing has surged over the past decade and is expected to continue increasing over the medium term crowding out productive spending,” he said.

he also said fiscal deficits were consistent­ly higher than budgeted due to over optimistic revenue projection­s hence budgeting better will help to generate significan­t fiscal savings.

Patience Oniha, the director-general, Debt Management Office (DMO), said it was not advisable for Nigeria to continue borrowing, especially as its debt stock has grown faster over the last few years.

“Continuous borrowing is not the solution. We are supposed to be diversifyi­ng the sources of revenue and raising revenue to service debt,” she said

She acknowledg­ed that some of Nigeria’s peers in Sub Saharan Africa have much higher debt to GDP ratio but they have much more tax revenue to GDP.

“As debt stock is growing so is debt service; 60 percent of the external debt stock is concession­al but it will be good to have 100 percent external concession­al loans

Ben Akabueze, the director-general, Budget Office, advised that in its drive to grow revenue, the government should tax the rich and have them pay taxes on luxurious goods as well as their properties.

“If the rich can buy a private jet for themselves, they should pay 100 percent tax on it, we cannot escape the reality of an upward adjustment of our tax rates like VAT and excise duty. We need to change some tax laws and tighten controls on remittance­s to avoid leakages, “he said.

Speaking on oil revenue, the DG said although Nigeria may not be in the position to determine oil prices but it can improve its volume by curbing oil theft

Doyin Salami, chief economic adviser to the president, said discussion­s around subsidy removal should tilt more towards gradual or immediate removal, especially when current unfavourab­le macroecono­mic conditions are considered.

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