The Guardian (Nigeria)

Next govt to inherit N71.5tr debts, liabilitie­s after May 29

• FG blames oil theft for massive borrowing • Economists prescribe securitisa­tion for flexible repayment, urge govt to pursue growth policies • There is so much corruption in bureaucrat­ic processes, says Utomi

- By Geoff Iyatse and Helen Oji

BARELY six months to the end of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion, the Federal Government’s total debts and other financial liabilitie­s have reached N71.46 trillion.

The figure does not include undocument­ed contingent liabilitie­s to university lecturers, public school teachers and other public employees to whom government is indebted.

Analysts say these undocument­ed liabilitie­s could run into several trillions. The figures also exclude other pending financial liabilitie­s to non- lending bilateral and multilater­al institutio­ns. These include regional and global institutio­ns the country subscribes to as a member.

While the traditiona­l debt stock of the central government has ballooned from less than N10 trillion as at June 2015, a month into the current administra­tion, to N35.7 trillion in June 2022, FG has revealed that its debt obligation­s to road contractor­s are about N11.16 trillion.

During a recent budget defence, the Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, said government is committed to highway contractor­s to the tune of about N10.4 trillion even as a total

of about N765 billion relates to unpaid certificat­es for executed works.

Of Nigeria’s documented N42.8 trillion sovereign debts as at June, FG’S obligation stood at N35.7 trillion. The amount does not include the controvers­ial Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN)’ s estimated N20 trillion overdraft extended to the Federal Government.

Besides, government’s “contingent liabilitie­s” to different institutio­ns and projects stood at N4.6 trillion at the close of last year. The figure is projected to reach N4.98 trillion by December and jump by as much as 50 per cent to N7.52 trillion next year when the current administra­tion is billed to hand over.

The Guardian had reported that items and organisati­ons on the contingent liability list are Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company Plc, Nigeria Ports Authority – Lekki Deep Seaport, pension arrears, NNPC – AKK Gas Pipeline Project among others.

The liabilitie­s, interestin­gly, do not capture dues to the Nigeria Union of Teachers ( NUT), Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es ( ASUU) and several other labour groups.

Obligation­s relating to the country’s ongoing bilateral and multilater­al financial commitment­s are also not captured. These categories, according to Prof. Godwin Owoh, an economist and debt management consultant, add to the country’s real debts.

Effectivel­y, President Buhari’s administra­tion will be passing well over N72 trillion in debt and contingenc­ies to a new administra­tion in May, next year. Other officially undocument­ed figures when added will push the sovereign debt towards N100 trillion.

Apart from concerns about the cost of servicing the bloated CBN overdrafts, stakeholde­rs are worried about government’s silence on how it intends to liquidate the supposed shortterm facility.

Last year, the Debt Management Office ( DMO) said the facility would be converted to a 30- year instrument. This was to be done in line with the debt management strategy of the administra­tion, which leans towards longterm maturing.

The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, followed up with confirmati­on of the securisati­on plan, but it drew a shocked reaction from experts who warned that the plan was alien to Ways and Means ( W& M) management and runs foul of the CBN Act.

Section 38 of the CBN Act says the apex bank could extend overdrafts to the Federal Government to tackle a temporary shortfall in revenue. It, however, states that any outstandin­g overdraft shall not exceed five per cent of the previous year’s actual revenue of government.

It added that the amount lent should be repaid “as soon as possible” and that the power to extend the credit line shall not be exercisabl­e subsequent­ly, should the government fail in liability to repay at the end of the financial circle.

IMF had called on the apex bank to subject the facilities to the ambit of its enabling loan. Other experts have also called on CBN to liquidate the amount and call off the lifeline to rein in inflation, which has crossed the 20 per cent mark.

The Federal Government, at the weekend, blamed its penchant for borrowings on oil theft. This might not be unconnecte­d to the recent advice given to government by DMO as regards massive borrowing.

DMO Director- General, Patience Oniha, at a workshop for Senators and House of Representa­tives on Thursday, said revenue growth should be accelerate­d and loans obtained should be invested in revenue- generating infrastruc­ture to service debt. She also advised government to prioritise revenue generation other than increase borrowing.

But the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, who spoke at the eighth meeting of the National Employment Council in Abuja, said oil theft forced the current adminstrat­ion to resort to borrowing.

Nigeria has been unable to meet up with the OPEC product quota as a result of unpreceden­ted theft in the oil sector.

This developmen­t, according to Ngige, has continued to hamper efforts of government towards providing necessary social services to the country’s teeming youthful population.

He said: “Now, we cannot even produce the 1.8 million barrels. We are hovering around 1.1 million barrels per day, and they told us that some people are stealing our crude oil. This is a very serious matter because it has made us become very mendicant. We are now a mendicant nation, resorting to begging for survival,” he added.

MEANWHILE, an economist, Prof. Pat Utomi, has attributed the nation’s rising debt to poor management and inability to monitor implementa­tion of projects at all levels.

“A new minister comes, awards contracts and does not monitor what was done; the minister’s boys play their own game. Now if you awarded a contract for road constructi­on in naira last year, with the rising exchange rate, the money is irrelevant this year.

“The corruption that is going on in the bureaucrac­y is so much, it has developed a huge bubble that they can not manage it again and this has added to our problem as a country.

“When you do not pay contractor­s, they lay- off workers and tax collection shrinks and unemployme­nt increases and the economy cannot grow.

These are the problems we are facing currently.”

To ameliorate the situation, Utomi said there is a need for a new government to adopt a zero- based model to put all the debt into proper context .

“We need proper renegotiat­ion and payment to spread over a particular period. The new government needs to look at a variety of options to deploy to achieve multiple goals and stimulate economic activities and deal with inflation.

“There must be a new policy going forward to guide project management. Government does not need to award a contract that is not cash- backed, if you do, a successor may come and will not pay attention to them and the debt will continue to stockpile there.

“We need a fiscal responsibi­lity act that covers all these. We need not go too far from achieving a balanced budget,” he added.

Former President of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria ( CIBN), Uche Olowo, said government should be holistic on its comprehens­ive total debt before finding ways to tackle the problem.

He pointed out that the nation’s rising debt is surmountab­le if government can securitise the total debt to create an opportunit­y for a long- term repayment plan, to reduce the burden of repayment.

According to him, there is also the need for government to initiate policies that will encourage growth, boost productivi­ty and jumpstart the economy.

“Government must also create a value chain for agricultur­al developmen­t because the sector is a huge employer of labour. Then labour- intensive policies will also help.

“Moreso, policies that will encourage the private sector to produce and invest are also key. We must find a way to ensure that the creative industry and other sectors that would stimulate growth and jumpstart the economy are prioritise­d.

“The debt profile is rising because government is not generating enough revenue from taxation and they have to borrow to implement their policies and even with the borrowings, the economy is not growing.”

 ?? ?? Marketing Director, Reckitt Sub Saharan Africa, Tanzim Rezwan ( left); Founder, World Toilet Organisati­on, Prof. Jack Sim; Nollywood
Celebrity/ Brand Ambassador, Harpic, Ali Nuhu and External Communicat­ions and Partnershi­ps Lead, SSA for Reckitt, Cassandra Uzo- Ogbugh at the World Toilet Summit 2022 held in Abuja.
Marketing Director, Reckitt Sub Saharan Africa, Tanzim Rezwan ( left); Founder, World Toilet Organisati­on, Prof. Jack Sim; Nollywood Celebrity/ Brand Ambassador, Harpic, Ali Nuhu and External Communicat­ions and Partnershi­ps Lead, SSA for Reckitt, Cassandra Uzo- Ogbugh at the World Toilet Summit 2022 held in Abuja.
 ?? PHOTO: FIFA. COM ?? Opening ceremony of 2022 FIFA World Cup in Doha, Qatar.. yesterday.
PHOTO: FIFA. COM Opening ceremony of 2022 FIFA World Cup in Doha, Qatar.. yesterday.

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