The Federal Government spent a total of N1.03 trillion on servicing debt in the first quarter of this year compared with N779.73 billion in the corresponding period of 2020, the Central Bank of Nigeria has said.
The apex bank disclosed this in its Economic Report for April 2021 released at the weekend.
It attributed the surge in the government’s debt service obligations during the period to interest payments on additional FGN bonds, promissory notes and the redemption of the $500 million Eurobonds, which matured in January 2021.
The CBN stated: “Public borrowing remained anchored on the medium-term debt strategy of the Federal Government
“FGN debt outstanding rose to N28,984.30 billion at end-March 2021, an increase of 2.5 per cent and 15.8 per cent, relative to end-December 2020 and the corresponding period in 2020.
“The development was propelled by the fiscal policy drive to support economic recovery, reduce infrastructural deficit and fund COVID-19 mitigation programmes.
“Domestic debt accounted for 57.0 per cent of FGN total debt, while external debt obligations constituted 43.0 per cent. This compares with a mix of 70:30 for domestic-external debt target in the 2020-2023 medium-term debt strategy of the FGN.
“Following FGN’s full redemption of the $500 million Eurobond in January 28, 2021, external debt stock declined by 1.8 per cent, relative to end-December 2020.
“Comparatively, domestic debt outstanding rose by 3.6 per cent. FGN bond issues maintained its dominance in the composition of domestic debt, accounting for 75.5 per cent of the total domestic debt, followed by Treasury Bills (15.8 per cent); Promissory Notes (5.7 per cent); FGN Sukuk (2.2 per cent); and others 3 (0.9 per cent).
“The distribution is in tandem with the FGN’s objective to hold more of long term domestic debt instruments than short (75:25).
“Debt service obligations as at first quarter of 2021, amounted to N1,032.29 trillion, compared with N779.73 billion and N461.98 billion in in the first and fourth quarters of 2020, respectively.
“The significant rise was due, largely, to the interest payments on additional FGN bonds, Promissory Notes and the redemption of the $500 million Eurobonds, which matured in January 2021.”