The Federal Government has marshalled a a new borrowing plan from the domestic debt market, according to a statement by the Debt Management Office.
The DMO in statement indicated thaf the Federal Executive Council (FEC) at its meeting on Wednesday approved a new Medium-Term Debt Management Strategy for Nigeria, for the period of 2020 to 2023.
The DMO, in the statement titled “Federal Executive Council approves a new debt management strategy for Nigeria’, said
that “based on the current public debt stock, government’s borrowing needs in the medium-term (as stated in the 2021 Appropriation Act, MTEF, 2021-2023), as well as future global trends, Nigeria’s 2020-2023 MTDS can be summarised as follows:
“Borrowing will be from domestic and external sources but a larger proportion of new borrowing will be from domestic sources using long-term instruments while for external borrowing, concessional funding from multilateral and bilateral sources will be prioritised.”
According to the statement, the total public debt as percentage of Gross Domestic Product for 2020 to 2032 increased from 25 per cent to 40 per cent in order to accommodate new borrowings to fund budget deficit and other obligations of government.
It added that promissory notes were to be issued to settle government arrears, and the ways and means advance at the Central Bank of Nigeria.
The statement said further that domestic debt was pegged at 70 per cent maximum while external debt was 30 per cent maximum, to further strengthen the domestic debt market and optimise access to both concessional and commercial sources of funding.
Average tenor of debt portfolio was minimum of 10 years; while long term was fixed at 75 per cent and short term was 25 per cent.
This was to sustain the issuance of longer tenured instruments with tenors of 10 years and above, in order to effectively manage refinancing risk.