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Nigeria’s Debt to GDP still Low Says Finance Minister
Nume Ekeghe
The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed has reiterated that Nigeria’s debt to gross domestic products (GDP) ratio is still low at 33 per cent amidst concerns over heightened increased borrowing.
She said this during an interview on Channels televisionrecently where she restated that the federal governments borrowing is accurately planned to boost growth and development of the economy.
She said: “ We have made sure that we have a debt management strategy and a medium-term debt management strategy. So, this borrowing is not being done by just a fiat as it is capsuled in a plan. We are guided by the fiscal responsibility that sets the limit of how much you can borrow at any particular time.
“We have also structured the borrowing to make sure we have a good balance between domestic borrowing as well as external financial borrowing. So truly, in 2020 because of a COVID-19 crisis, we ended up borrowing more than we had planned, because we have to change all our plans to be able to accommodate revenue crash remember, so we have to change our plans to be able to borrow more to contain the pandemic. Because if the pandemic was not contained in Nigeria will have been in a very in a much bigger problem, then the type of recession that we went into.”
She added: “So the borrowing we are doing now is to make sure we are improving critical infrastructure unnecessary for the sustained growth of this economy if we don’t do these investments now, our country will not develop and grow.”
“We are careful of how we borrow and I keep saying and I’ve said it and I’m saying it again today that the debt levels in Nigeria is not high. If you consider the size of the Nigerian economy, we have a debt to GDP ratio now that is at 33 per cent. Some of the countries in Africa that you’re you can compare us with how as much as 70 per cent of debt,” she added.
She maintained that the FG is doing its bid at increasing revenue avenues through tax incentives and creating an enabling environment for businesses to thrive.
She added: “The problem we have a revenue problem. And that is all we’re doing, at least in the midst of finance, Budget and National Planning, and at least in the Federal Executive Council, is concentrate on increasing revenue and providing a space for businesses to be able to work better so that they can produce better and pay more, more taxes.”