The Federal Government has described as nothing but scaremongering anchored on a false premise the apocalyptic scenarios on the nation’s debt profile, painted by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar in his press statement on Tuesday
A statement issued in Abuja on Wednesday by Special Assistant to the President (Media), Office of the Minister of Information and Culture, Segun Adeyemi, quoted the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, as saying that while the Federal Government welcomes constructive criticism, such must be based on verifiable facts rather than conjectures and innuendos.
Alhaji Mohammed said, “There is no doubt that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar loves our country and wishes her well, otherwise he would not have sustained his serial quest for the country’s highest position. One can only hope that his resort to the use of such words as ‘precipice’, ‘foreclosure’ and ‘economic ruin’ does not reflect anything but best wishes for the country at this time.”
The minister said that the figure of Nigeria’s debt to revenue ratio of 99 per cent in the first quarter of 2020, quoted by the former Vice President, is not in the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper, MTEFFSP, where he claimed he got it from, adding, “We are also not able to ascertain the source of the first quarter figures of N943.12 billion for debt servicing and N950.56 billion for retained revenue, which he also quoted.”
Alhaji Mohammed added that the debt service provisions in the annual budgets include principal repayments, interest payments and all other applicable charges, adding, “Therefore, the statement that debt servicing does not equate to debt repayment is not only wrong, but ill-informed.”
Reacting to the former Vice President’s assertion that revenue needs to go up, the minister said that the incumbent administration has introduced several measures to shore up revenues, including the passage and implementation of the Finance Act, 2019; various on-going reforms in the oil and gas sector; tax administration and collections; as well as the Strategic Revenue Growth Initiatives.
Furthermore, Mohammed said that since Nigeria’s debt service is expressly provided for in the annual budgets and the debt service payments are made as and when due, the issue of creditors foreclosing on Nigeria, as strangely predicted by the former Vice President, does not arise.
He said that contrary to the statement credited to Alhaji Abubakar that Nigeria has experienced alarming and unprecedented increase in the ratios of debt to GDP and debt service to revenue, indeed, Nigeria’s ratio of debt to GDP is one of the lowest in the world at 19.00 per cent, as at December 31, 2019, while government is making concerted efforts to increase revenue so as to bring down the ratio of debt service to revenue.
The minister said, “One of the reasons why debt service to revenue is high is because revenue generation in Nigeria has been low, with over-dependence on the oil sector. This is corroborated by the fact that the ratio of Nigeria’s tax revenue to GDP is one of the lowest in the world at about 6 per cent.”
Revealing that unlike what obtained in the past, when the nation borrowed to service the crass indulgence of a few fat cats, the loans being obtained by the current administration are being primarily used to finance infrastructure projects, which include roads, railways, bridges and power, and the loans are long-term in nature, which would benefit present and future generations, the minister said, “We have said that in the face of massive infrastructural decay, no responsible government will sit by and do nothing. This administration’s borrowing, therefore, is aimed mostly at revamping our infrastructure. The loans for the educational sector will contribute to the development of our human capital while the loans for the agricultural sector will help the move to diversify the economy.”
Alhaji Mohammed added that despite the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the country’s economy, the Federal Government has continued to take measures to mitigate the effects of the pandemic, assuring that the government will always act in the best interest of Nigerians.