The International Monetary Fund says that Nigeria is likely to spend its entire 2020 revenue on servicing debts as a result of the country’s ‘very low level of fiscal revenue’.
Jesmin Rahman, IMF’s mission chief and senior resident representative for Nigeria, disclosed the projections while speaking at a webinar hosted by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), Fiscal Policy Roundtable and Tax Investment and Competitiveness Policy Commission.
He was quoted by TheCable to have said that “The first vulnerability comes from having a very low level of fiscal revenues, total revenues at seven percent of GDP is less than half of sub-Saharan Africa’s average and far lower than the averaging oil-exporting countries.
“It is also lower than the minimum threshold of 12 percent which is considered necessary for the government to provide an enabling and growth-enhancing role.
“Interest payments take up a large share of revenues, leaving little resources for everything else this year, in particular, all of the federal government’s revenues are expected to be spent on interest payments.
“This is particularly staggering when we look at how little is spent on education and health.”
Speaking further, Rahman said the fund considers Nigeria’s public debt, including Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria’s debt, stands at 29 percent of GDP; lower than the 53 percent average in other developing and emerging market economies.
“When we do our in-depth analysis, public debt is projected to reach about 37 percent of GDP this year and remains roughly around that level in the medium term,” she said.
“We do various stress scenarios in our debt sustainability analysis and in all of those scenarios, public debt does not go beyond 50 percent of GDP.
“So, I will not say that public debt is having a crisis or that public debt is extremely high. It is really a revenue issue; very low and volatile revenue is what poses a lot of fiscal risks and there are sizable financing risks in the next 12 months.”
Commending the 2019 finance act, the IMF official said Nigeria needs to move on multiple fronts to raise revenue beyond the minimum threshold necessary for government effectiveness.
She listed some of the moves to include improving value-added tax and company income tax efficiency, increasing the percentage of active taxpayers, reducing tax exemptions and raising trust in public institutions to improve tax morale.