Friday, September 5, 2025 - Nigeria devoted N8.93
trillion to debt servicing between January and September 2024, consuming 61 per
cent of its total revenue during the period.
Figures from the federal government’s budget implementation
report show that debt repayments far outpaced projections, placing additional
strain on limited public finances.
In the first quarter, N2.26 trillion went to debt
obligations, followed by N3.77 trillion in the second quarter and N2.89
trillion in the third. Each quarter overshot the budgeted N2.01 trillion
earmarked for debt servicing. The cumulative nine-month bill also exceeded the
N6.03 trillion projection by nearly 48 per cent.
Analysts say the persistent overshooting demonstrates how
quickly Nigeria’s fiscal resources are being swallowed by debt obligations,
leaving little room for investment in infrastructure, health, or education.
The rising debt burden coincides with underperforming
revenues. The government expected to raise N19.4 trillion over the nine-month
period but collected only N14.55 trillion. Actual receipts were N3.58 trillion
in Q1, N4.88 trillion in Q2, and N6.08 trillion in Q3, each falling below the
N6.46 trillion quarterly target.
The mismatch between earnings and obligations illustrates
the growing fragility of Africa’s largest economy, already battling high
inflation, volatile exchange rates, and underwhelming oil income.
A closer look at the revenue profile shows non-oil revenues
outperforming expectations. Between January and September, non-oil income stood
at N3.65 trillion, surpassing both the nine-month forecast of N2.67 trillion
and the full-year target of N3.56 trillion. Improved tax collection from
corporate income tax, VAT, and customs duties was credited for the stronger
performance.
Oil revenues, however, continued to lag. Nigeria earned
N4.63 trillion from crude in the same period, well short of the N6.13 trillion
target and significantly below the full-year projection of N8.17 trillion.
Production shortfalls, pipeline vandalism, and large-scale crude theft remain
major setbacks.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank have
repeatedly cautioned that Nigeria’s debt trajectory is unsustainable without
structural reforms. With more than half of government revenue now spent on debt
servicing, policymakers face stark choices between meeting financial
obligations and investing in critical development needs.
The government has embarked on tax reforms and is pushing technology-driven revenue collection to boost non-oil earnings. Still, fiscal analysts warn that unless oil production stabilises and spending discipline improves, Nigeria’s debt service problem will continue to erode economic stability.
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