Finance Minister, Okonjo-Iweala
 
Nigeria’s  total public debt rose from N6.25tn ($40.1bn) in 2010 to N9.04tn  ($58.04bn) by the end of December 2012, the Debt Management Office has  said.
 The DMO,  in its 2013 Report of the  Annual National Debt Sustainability Analysis,   released in Abuja on  Sunday, also  said it would issue $100m Diaspora bond in 2014.
 The total public debt stock includes  both external and domestic debts owed by the federal  and state  governments as well as the Federal Capital Territory.
 Over a period of three years –  2010 to 2013 – the nation  has had to part with N2.21tn ($14.17bn) in debt service payments.
“Nigeria’s total debt stock – domestic  and external for the federal, states and the FCT as of end-December  2012, stood at $58,044.58m, representing an increase of $8,624.72m or  17.45 per cent over the amount recorded as of the end of December,  2011,” it stated.
 For the first time, the DMO, which had  been helping states to reconstruct their debts  put the domestic debt  profile of the states and the FCT  at N1.47tn ($9.45bn).
 The DMO said the    Federal Government’s contingent liabilities  totalled  N3.67tn.
 Furthermore, it disclosed that the  N15.58 ($100m)  Diaspora bond   would help Nigerians  based abroad to  identify with the development strides in the nation.
 As of December 31, 2012, the nation’s  total public debt stood at N9.04tn ($58.04bn), the DMO said. 
This  represented an increase of N1.3tn ($8.62bn) or 17.45 per cent over the  amount recorded at the end of December 2011 N7.47tn ($49.42bn). The external debt component increased by $860.49m or 15.19 per cent over the amount recorded in 2011 to reach $6.53bn in 2012.
 The breakdown of the total public debt  showed that the Federal Government accounted for N6.5tn ($41.97bn) or  72.43 per cent, while  that of  the states and the FCT stood at N1.47tn  ($9.45bn) or 16.31 per cent.
 A further breakdown showed that the  share of the domestic and external debt stood at 88.74 per cent and  11.26 per cent, respectively.
The Debt Sustainability Analysis report  stated, “The share of the domestic debt has continued to dominate the  trend in the total public debt since 2008. The total debt stock of the  Federal Government  and the states, as a percentage of the Gross  Domestic Product, maintained an upward trend from 10.47 per cent to  22.43 per cent in 2012.
 “However, compared to the global  threshold of 40 per cent (which relates to only external debt  sustainability) set for medium performers, Nigeria’s total public debt  still remained within sustainable limits. The total public debt/GDP  ratio was below the country-specific threshold of 25 per cent.”
 The DMO said that the debt service  payments of the Federal Government,   the states and the FCT rose to  N864.47bn ($5.55bn) or 24.25 per cent in 2012  from N685.34bn ($4.47bn)  in 2011. The debt service payment stood at N638.62bn ($4.15bn) in 2010.
Of the total debt service in 2012, the  Federal Government  and the states’ domestic debt service accounted for  94.72 per cent, while the balance of 5.28 per cent went to external debt  service.
 The total domestic debt service at the  end of December 2012 stood at N720.55bn, indicating an increase of 34.08  per cent over the level in 2011.
 The total domestic debt service of the  Federal Government as a percentage of the total domestic debt stock  outstanding was 11.02 per cent in 2012, which was  higher than the 9.56  per cent recorded in 2011.
 According to the DMO, the significant  rise in 2011 and 2012 was due to the increase in the cost of borrowing  occasioned by the contractionary monetary policy regime, particularly  the upward review of the benchmark Monetary Policy by the Central Bank  of Nigeria from 6.25 to 12 per cent.
 The DMO stated, “The external debt service showed a downward trend, while that of the domestic debt increased significantly.
 “The decrease in the external debt  service was largely attributable to full redemption of some IBRD  (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development) and ADB(African  Development Bank) loans over the period and the reliance on the domestic  bond market to largely meet the Federal Government’s borrowing  requirements since 2002.”
 The DMO reported that the Federal  Government’s contingent liabilities rose from N2.59tn in 2010 to N3.48tn  in 2011. The liabilities further increased to N3.67tn in 2012.
 Contingent liabilities are obligations that may be incurred in the future depending on the outcome of certain events.
 The DMO listed the contingent  liabilities of the Federal Government  as  pension liabilities, N1.32tn  (2012); local contractors,   N233.94bn; pending litigation, N92bn;  federal mortgage, N32bn; guarantee on agriculture, N249.58bn; and  AMCON  guaranteed bonds, N1.74tn.
 The DMO said, “As part of the efforts  to address the issue of contractors’ arrears, the Federal Government had  set up a private sector driven Special Purpose Vehicle to issue a  five-year split coupon bond with a face value of N233.94bn, which was  guaranteed  in favour of the bondholders.
 “There is an arrangement by the Federal Government to redeem the bond at maturity through annual budgetary provisions.”
 At a workshop on Friday, the  Director-General, DMO, Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, said that the organisation  would issue a special bond in the first quarter of 2014.
 The bond, which has been approved by  the National Assembly as part of the 2013–2015 Medium Term Expenditure  Framework Strategy, will enable Nigerians based abroad to invest in  projects they can  identify with in the country.
Explaining the attractiveness of the  Nigerian bond market, Nwankwo said by the end of 2012, 19 per cent of  the bonds issued by the country were held by foreign investors.
 He also justified the need to garner  resources from all available sources to close  the huge infrastructure  gap, adding that the country required about $35bn to fund development in  the next 10 years.
 
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