The Nigerian Government said that the N11.34 trillion deficit in the 2023 budget would be financed through domestic and foreign sources, including multi-lateral-bilateral loan drawdowns.
This was disclosed by the Finance Minister, Zainab Ahmed on Wednesday, during the presentation of the N21.8 trillion 2023 budget.
Debt service: Ahmed said at N6.31 trillion, debt service is 29% of government expenditure. She said:
- “This is 71% higher than the estimate for 2022, including interest repayment of N1.2 trillion for CBN overdraft called ways and means loans.
- “You will see that statutory transfer is N967 billion, and debt service N6.3 trillion, higher than N3.685 trillion projected in 2022 budgeted”
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Deficit: The Minister revealed that the budget deficit is to be financed mainly by borrowings, she said:
- “The overall budget deficit is N11.34 trillion for 2023 and it would be financed through:
- “Domestic sources: 7.04 trillion
- “Foreign sources: N1.76 trillion
- “Multi-lateral-bilateral loan drawdowns N1.77 bn and Privatisation proceeds N208.18 bn”.
Defense and Education: Zainab Ahmed also stated the Defence and Security sectors have been allocated N2.98 trillion or 13.4% of the 2023 budget and education allocated N1.79 trillion, which represents 8.2% of the budget.
The Minister noted the amount includes the recurrent and capital expenditures, which are provisioned for the military, police, intelligence, and paramilitary.
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The second largest Allocation went to the Education Sector with N1.79 trillion, which represents 8.2% of the federal government budget and includes:
- N972.93 billion for the Federal Ministry of Education and its agencies, including recurrent and capital expenditure, and N103.29 billion for the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).
- N248.27 billion for transfers to the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) for infrastructure projects in tertiary institutions.
- N470 billion was provisioned for Tertiary Education Revitalisation and Salary Enhancement.
What you should know
Nigeria spent a sum of N1.17 trillion on local and foreign debt servicing in the third quarter of 2022, representing a 27.9% increase compared to N912.7 billion during the previous quarter (Q2 2022).
- This is according to Nigeria’s debt service report for Q3 2022 released by the Debt Management Office (DMO).
- A breakdown of the report showed that N820.59 billion was spent on servicing domestic debts, while N346.43 billion (or $801.24 million) was incurred on foreign debt service costs.
Meanwhile, Nigeria’s total debt stock fell to $101.91 billion as of the end of September 2022 from $103.31 billion recorded as of June 2022.