Economy

Nigeria spent N2.05trn to service domestic debt in 2021-DMO

Nigeria spent a sum of N2.05 trillion to service its domestic debts in the year 2021, representing an increase of 10.8% compared to the N1.85 trillion incurred in the previous year.

This is according to the report on Nigeria’s debt service, released by the Debt Management Office (DMO).

A further look at the data showed that a sum of N1.66 trillion was paid as interest on federal government bonds, which accounted for 80.8% of the total amount incurred on domestic debt service. The amount spent on servicing domestic debts in 2021 is the highest on record.

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s domestic debt profile rose by N3.49 trillion in the review period to N23.7 trillion as of December 2021 from N20.21 trillion recorded in the previous year. Domestic debt accounted for 59.9% of Nigeria’s total debt profile, while external debt represents 41.1% of the total.

The rise in the country’s debt profile is attributed to the N5.6 trillion budget deficit for the review year by the federal government. Recall that the federal government signed a budget of N13.59 trillion for 2021, which needed a sum of N5.6 trillion to fund the budget deficit.

The budget deficit for the year informed the need for N2.34 trillion new loans each from both domestic and foreign sources, N709.69 billion multilateral/bilateral loan drawdowns and N205.15 billion in privatization proceeds.

A cursory look at the breakdown of Nigeria’s domestic debt service, a sum of N81.81 billion was incurred as charges for Nigerian treasury bills, accounting for 4% of the total amount. In the same vein, a sum of N219.41 billion was paid back as part of the principal for promissory notes, while N25 billion was paid for treasury bonds. (Nairametrics)

Felix Oloyede

Felix Oloyede is a Mass Communication graduate with 19 years experience in journalism. He has worked with TheWeek Magazine; Mirror Newspapers; West Africa BusinessNews and BusinessHallmark Newspaper. Oloyede has covered different news beats ranging from crime; arts; politics; commerce and industries to finance and economy. He is an alumnus of Bloomberg Media Initiative Africa. He has also attended different trainings on Media Communication at the Lagos Business School. He is an alumnus of Bloomberg Media Initiative Africa. He has also attended different trainings on Media Communication at the Lagos Business School.

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