Sunday, June 7, 2026 - The Federal Government debt repayments exceeded the 2025 amended budget allocation by N1.90tn in the first nine months of the year, fresh data from the Budget Office of the Federation has shown. The 2025 third quarter Budget Implementation Report showed that total debt-related payments, including domestic debts, foreign debts and sinking fund, rose to N12.63tn between January and September, compared with the prorated budget provision of N10.74tn. This represents an overrun of N1.90tn or 17.65 per cent.
The pressure was driven mainly by debt service, which stood at N12.52tn in
the first three quarters, against the prorated allocation of N10.45tn, showing
excess spending of N2.07tn or 19.8 per cent. A breakdown showed that domestic
debt service gulped N6.23tn, exceeding its N5.39tn provision by N832.42bn.
Foreign debt service also rose to N6.30tn, surpassing its N5.06tn allocation by
N1.24tn.
The figures indicate that 67.2 per cent of the Federal Government's
retained revenue of N18.63tn was spent on debt service in the first nine months
of 2025. When the sinking fund is included, debt-related payments consumed
about 67.8 per cent of revenue. This means that for every N100 retained by the
Federal Government between January and September, about N67 went into servicing
debts, leaving roughly N33 for salaries, overheads, capital projects, transfers
and other obligations.
The report also showed that aggregate Federal Government revenue
underperformed the budget by N12.03tn or 39.24 per cent, as actual revenue of
N18.63tn fell short of the N30.67tn projected for the first three quarters. In
the third quarter alone, the government generated N7.70tn, below the quarterly
target of N10.22tn by N2.52tn or 24.64 per cent. The Budget Office attributed
the weakness largely to persistent oil revenue shortfalls, despite stronger
non-oil collections.
The debt burden also crowded out capital spending. Total capital
expenditure stood at only N3.10tn in the first nine months, far below the
N17.58tn budgeted for the period. This means actual debt-related payments were
more than four times capital expenditure. The report stated that the debt
service-to-revenue ratio remained elevated and warned that fiscal space was
constrained, requiring urgent revenue mobilization and expenditure
rationalization.
Overall, aggregate Federal Government expenditure stood at N24.66tn, below the prorated N41.24tn budget by N16.58tn. However, the composition of spending showed that debt obligations took priority over capital releases. The fiscal deficit for the first three quarters stood at N6.03tn, compared with a prorated deficit target of N10.58tn, while financing items totalled N12.07tn, led by multilateral and bilateral project-tied loans of N4.81tn and domestic borrowing of N7.08tn.
The figures suggest that Nigeria's main fiscal problem remains weak revenue rather than spending alone, as rising debt costs continue to absorb the bulk of government income and limit room for infrastructure investment. As fiscal pressures persist, the Federal Government is considering refinancing some of its costly obligations and tapping additional funding sources to bridge its budget shortfall, taking advantage of favourable market conditions and stronger investor sentiment driven by higher oil prices.
"We think that this timing is good for us to be able to maybe even
refinance some of our expensive past debts, but also to raise more funding for
our development at this critical time," Finance Minister Taiwo Oyedele
told Bloomberg TV in an interview on Wednesday. "You don't know what
happens tomorrow. But as of today, market conditions are actually very
good."
The improved outlook has been supported by the recent surge in crude oil
prices following tensions involving the United States, Israel and Iran. As a
major oil producer, Nigeria has benefited from stronger export earnings, while
investors have become more confident about the country's ability to meet its
obligations.
According to Oyedele, the government is seeking ways to finance a budget
deficit estimated at N30tn this year despite gains in tax revenue generated
from fiscal and tax reforms introduced under the current administration.
"We're keeping our options open; we know the size of the deficit,"
Oyedele said, including less-costly concessionary loans. He added that
discussions were continuing with the World Bank and other multilateral
institutions, while interest from international investors had increased as a
result of reforms undertaken by the government.
The minister's comments come as higher oil prices provide some relief for
government finances, although they also pose risks to inflation. The resulting
price pressures have complicated monetary policy, prompting the Central Bank of
Nigeria to pause its interest-rate easing cycle. The development could further
test the government's ability to fund critical infrastructure and social
projects as President Bola Tinubu's administration seeks to sustain economic
reforms and accelerate development spending.
However, Oyedele recently said Nigeria could no longer rely mainly on
borrowing to fund development, warning that the country must build a
sustainable fiscal system capable of supporting critical sectors of the
economy. It was reported earlier reported that the Federal Government spent
only N3.10tn on capital projects in the first nine months of 2025 despite
accessing N11.89tn from various debt financing sources during the period,
highlighting the wide gap between borrowing and infrastructure spending.

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