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AfDB: debt service payments pose greatest risk to Nigeria

As economies went into lockdowns, people’s incomes declined, millions lost their jobs, trade volumes fell, and demand for goods and services declined. Cumulative loss to Africa’s GDP is estimated at $173 to $236 billion for 2020 and 2021, respectively

Nigeria faces huge economic risk due to rising debt service cost, Akinwumi Adesina, President of African Development Bank, announced Thursday.

The bank chief who spoke at the First National Tax Dialogue organized by the Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS) in Abuja, said  Nigeria’s Debt-to-Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio will push debt service payments beyond more than 60 per cent of federally collected revenues. He added that with shrinkage in oil revenues, debt service payments pose the greatest risk to Nigeria.

He said that African economies will in two years record cumulative loss of $409 billion due to the Covid-19 pandemic. According to him, the loss to Africa’s GDP stood at N173 billion in 2020 and the Africa’s GDP is estimated  to lose $236 billion in 2021.

Adesina also commended the concerted efforts being deployed by Nigeria at all levels, including by the private sector, to tackle the pandemic.

He said: “Before the pandemic, six of the 10 fastest growing economies in the world were in Africa. With the pandemic shock, growth plummeted. Africa’s GDP growth declined by 2.1 per cent last year, the worst in two decades. As economies went into lockdowns, people’s incomes declined, millions lost their jobs, trade volumes fell, and demand for goods and services declined. Cumulative loss to Africa’s GDP is estimated at $173 to $236 billion for 2020 and 2021, respectively”.

Continuing, he said Nigeria has not been spared. The economy shrunk by three per cent in 2020 on account of falling oil prices and effects of the lockdowns on economic activity adding that the pandemic has impacted on budgetary balances and increased debt burdens.

According to Adesina, The African Development Bank Africa estimated that Africa faces an additional financing need of $125-154 billion by the end of 2020 to respond to the crisis. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that Africa will need $345 billion in additional fiscal space by 2023.

He said that Africa’s debt also is rising. “Debt-to-GDP, which has been stable at 60 per cent, has risen to 70 to 75 per cent of GDP. The bulk of the debt has been for private bond issuances on the global capital markets — Eurobonds. As countries’ currencies devalued and external reserves plummeted, in the face of declined economic activity, many African countries face risks of debt distress,” he said.

According to him, out of 38 African countries for which Debt Sustainability ratings are available, 14 are in high risk of debt distress, while 6 are already in debt distress.

“To put a human face on the pandemic effects, we estimate that 28 to 40 million people in Africa are projected to fall into extreme poverty, and 30 million jobs would be lost due to the pandemic. The African Development Bank has been very responsive in supporting Africa. The African Development Bank launched a $10 billion Crisis Response Facility to support African countries to meet the fiscal and economic challenges posed by the pandemic. The Bank provided $288 million in budget support to Nigeria to cope with the fiscal challenges posed by the pandemic,” he added.

The African Development Bank also launched a $3 billion fight COVID19 bond on the global market, the largest ever social bond in world history. It is now listed on the London Stock Exchange, the Luxembourg Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq.

Adesina commend the leadership of President Buhari and all the State Governors, and the private sector, in tackling the pandemic adding that it has been very challenging, given the second wave of the pandemic.

“But let us not be deterred. Nigeria and Africa will overcome this pandemic. African economies are projected to recover this year. The African Development Bank projects that GDP growth will recover to 3.4 per cent for Africa, as economies open up, commodity prices recover, tourism bounces back, and global value chains recover their manufacturing capacities,” he said.

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