Lagos, Rivers, A’Ibom, Delta, C’River top states’ indebtedness list
January 23, 20201.1K views0 comments
Lagos, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Delta and Cross River States are the leading debtor-states in the country, according to the latest statistics obtained from the Debt Management Office (DMO).
Data from the DMO also showed that the federal government has spent N606.869 billion to service domestic debts in the third quarter of 2019.
Collectively, the leading debtor-states accounted for more than N1.344 trillion of the over N4 trillion domestic debt standing against the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) as at September 30, 2019, according to the statistics obtained from DMO website.
Lagos leads the top five with N441,668,732,162.26, Rivers is next with N266,936,225,793.65, while Akwa Ibom, Delta, and Cross River states follow on the debt scale with N237,404,479,750.88; N230,574,799,366.01 and N167,967,705,888.45 respectively.
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Apart from the five, Imo (N148,900,627,563.76); Osun (N141,792,935,913.24); Ogun (N140,993,426,875.02); FCT (N137,862,316,926.60), Bayelsa (N127,243,132,172.38 and Kogi (N123,436,748,898.43) are other leading debtor-states.
On geopolitical basis, the six South-south states lead with the highest aggregate debt of N1,113,311,886,960.1 followed by the South-west with N957,158,703,679.04.
Next on geopolitical basis is the North-central (N510,790,349,558.25; North-west, which has the highest number of states in the country (seven) is next with N484, 867,921,659.82 followed by North-east and the five South-east states with N480,890217,532.59 and N357,513,205,096.01 respectively.
Yobe and Anambra States have the least debt burden. While Yobe’s debt stands at N28,533,478,934.83, that of Anambra is N34,007,803,458.86.
Nigeria’s total debt stock (local and foreign) as at September 30, 2019 was N26.2 trillion with the federal government accounting for over N9 trillion of the almost N14 trillion domestic debt stock.
Domestic debt service gulps N606bn in Q3
Meanwhile, the federal government spent a total of N606.869 billion to service domestic debt in the third quarter of 2019, the DMO data revealed.
A breakdown indicates that in July, August and September, N202,538,970,831.25; N172,663,065,962.98 and N231,667,076,449.72 respectively went into domestic service.
They included interest paid on Federal Government of Nigeria Savings Bonds (FGNSB), Nigeria Treasury Bills (NTBs), FGN Sukuk, Federal Government Bonds and Treasury Bonds.
But government’s plan to ease pressure from domestic creditors through the use of Promissory Notes, which are sovereign debt instruments, may not be getting the desired result.
The Federal Executive Council (FEC) had in April last year approved a N3.4 trillion Promissory Note programme to settle local debts and contractual obligations of the federal government.
However, about nine months after FEC approval, investigations revealed that the executive arm of government is yet to seek the endorsement of the Promissory Notes Programme from the National Assembly.