Tag: Nigeria budget

  • FG’s Deficit Funding: N6.1trn Raised Locally in Six Months

    FG’s Deficit Funding: N6.1trn Raised Locally in Six Months

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-25 09:10:00

    In a budget-performance update cited by The Punch, Nigeria’s federal government reportedly raised about N6.10 trillion from domestic sources in the first half of 2025 to help plug a wide fiscal gap. The report points to a deficit of roughly N5.70 trillion, with financing largely driven by local borrowing instruments.

    The same performance data indicates debt service pressure remains heavy, with large outflows to service obligations even as revenues lag spending needs. That combination—high deficits and high debt service—continues to compress fiscal space for social and capital priorities.

    The report also suggests the borrowing mix leaned heavily on bonds and other local issuances, reinforcing the concern that domestic credit may be crowded toward government paper instead of private-sector lending.

    Corroborating the same Budget Office picture, another outlet reported the government had to finance the deficit through “domestic borrowing… of N5.70tn” and proceeds including “privatisation… N64.92bn,” while a separate report noted “debt service was N4.44tn,” underscoring the weight of repayments in the fiscal structure.

    Echotitbits take: Nigeria’s deficit story is increasingly a debt-service story. Watch for (1) whether revenue reforms lift the non-oil base fast enough, and (2) whether domestic borrowing costs ease—because a sustained high-rate environment makes deficits more expensive and squeezes development spending.

    Source: The Punch — December 25, 2025 (https://punchng.com/budget-deficit-fg-raises-n6tn-locally-in-six-months/)

    The Punch 2025-12-25

  • Budget tussle: lawmakers split over crude benchmark for 2026–2028 plan

    Budget tussle: lawmakers split over crude benchmark for 2026–2028 plan

    Photo Credit: Punch / File
    2025-12-19 11:00:00

    From Punch coverage of the fiscal plan, Nigeria’s lawmakers are reportedly divided over the crude oil price benchmark proposed in the 2026–2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF).

    The benchmark matters because it shapes revenue projections, borrowing needs and how aggressively government can fund infrastructure and social programmes.

    Verification: BusinessDay reported the disagreement over the benchmark, while Reuters-based reporting (via Channels TV) has highlighted weak oil market dynamics that could complicate pricing assumptions.

    Quotes: BusinessDay: “Reps, Senate disagree over… crude benchmark…” Channels TV: “Nigerian oil struggles to find buyers…”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: Nigeria’s fiscal credibility rises or falls on realistic oil assumptions. Watch revised benchmark levels, production assumptions versus theft/vandalism realities, and whether non-oil revenue plans become concrete.

    Source: The Punch — 2025-12-19 — https://punchng.com/mtef-reps-senate-disagree-over-crude-benchmark/

    The Punch 2025-12-19

  • Debt Service and Salaries Outstrip Federal Revenue in 2025 Budget Data

    Debt Service and Salaries Outstrip Federal Revenue in 2025 Budget Data

    2025-12-18 00:00:00

    According to Punch, official budget documents show that debt service and personnel costs consumed more than the Federal Government’s total revenue in the first seven months of 2025, underscoring the pressure on fiscal space.

    The report says earnings came in well below pro-rata targets, forcing deep cuts to capital spending and tightening the room for new projects without additional borrowing or revenue reforms.

    The figures add weight to growing concerns about budget credibility, cash-backing of appropriations, and the need for stronger domestic revenue mobilisation.

    BusinessDay reported that “debt servicing and personnel costs consumed more than the Federal Government’s entire revenue” for the period, citing official budget documents. (BusinessDay)

    Another report on the same figures said Nigeria earned far below targets between January and July and that the gap hit capital releases hard. (Legit.ng)

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: When “fixed” obligations swallow revenue, the real economy suffers via delayed infrastructure and weak service delivery. Watch for 2026 revenue measures, credible subsidy/accounting reforms, and how government aligns spending plans with cash realities.

    Source: Punch — December 18, 2025 (https://punchng.com/salaries-debt-service-gulp-105-of-govt-revenue/)

    Photo credit: Punch

  • Nigeria’s 2025 Revenue Gap Hits ₦30tn, Finance Ministry Signals Tougher Budget Choices

    Nigeria’s 2025 Revenue Gap Hits ₦30tn, Finance Ministry Signals Tougher Budget Choices

    Photo Credit: Punch

    2025-12-17

    According to *The Punch*, Nigeria’s Finance Minister Wale Edun says the Federal Government recorded about ₦30 trillion in revenue shortfall in 2025, underscoring how weaker-than-expected inflows are tightening fiscal space.

    The report points to the knock-on effect on budget execution: with revenue underperforming, the government may face sharper trade-offs between debt servicing, capital spending, and core social obligations.

    It also raises questions around the pace of non-oil revenue reforms and the reliability of projected collections as Nigeria navigates inflation, exchange-rate pressures, and a still-fragile recovery.

    Other reporting on the same development includes:
    – Reuters: “Nigeria’s fiscal pressures are intensifying as revenue performance lags spending needs.”
    – Bloomberg: “Officials are weighing additional measures to close the gap as financing costs remain elevated.”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: A ₦30tn gap is a warning flare for 2026 planning—expect tougher scrutiny of waivers, leakages, and under-remittance. Watch the next FEC/Finance briefings for concrete revenue-side actions and whether spending is reprioritised toward high-multiplier projects.

    Source: The Punch — December 17, 2025 (https://punchng.com/fg-recorded-n30tn-revenue-shortfall-in-2025-edun/)

     

  • Reps set January deadline for CBN to reconcile alleged ₦5.2trn unremitted surplus

    Reps set January deadline for CBN to reconcile alleged ₦5.2trn unremitted surplus

    Photo Credit: Punch
    2025-12-16

    Nigeria’s House of Representatives committee investigating public revenue flows has fixed January deadlines for the Central Bank of Nigeria to submit reconciliation reports over an alleged ₦5.2 trillion unremitted operating surplus.

    According to the committee’s position, the reconciliation is to be completed with the Ministry of Finance and the Fiscal Responsibility Commission, after which the CBN governor is expected to appear before lawmakers for further clarification.

    The dispute goes to the heart of fiscal transparency: how government revenues are recorded, what qualifies as ‘operating surplus’, and whether remittances are made on time into the federation’s accounts.

    While investigations can improve accountability, they also raise questions about institutional friction between fiscal authorities and the apex bank at a time Nigeria needs coherent policy messaging to investors.

    The Guardian: Wale Edun said “Federal Government revenue is a critical aspect of government operations… We need clarity and accuracy in both fiscal and monetary management.”

    Channels TV: “The resolution was reached following a motion alleging non-remittance of over ₦5 trillion operating surplus and ₦11 trillion government revenue by the CBN.”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: Expect more hearings and document requests — and possibly legislative pressure for quick remittances. Watch the reconciliation timeline, any updated figures, and whether this spills into broader debates about CBN governance and oversight.

    Source: Punch — December 16, 2025 — https://punchng.com/reps-give-cbn-deadline-to-reconcile-n5-2tn-unremitted-operating-surplus/

     

  • Reps committee summons three DisCos over ₦100bn unpaid remittances

    Reps committee summons three DisCos over ₦100bn unpaid remittances

    PunchNG (illustrative image on article page)
    2025-12-16

    According to The Punch, the House of Representatives Public Accounts Committee summoned IBEDC, BEDC and PHEDC over alleged failure to remit more than ₦100bn owed to the Federal Government.

    The committee said the move is about protecting public resources and warned that ignoring summons can attract penalties under the law.

    The matter sits within broader debates on market shortfalls and cashflow constraints in the power sector.

    ThisDay: “summoned… over N100bn payment default.”

    BusinessDay: “summons… over N100bn debt to FG.”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: This could force repayment plans—or fade without enforcement. Watch for sanctions, structured recovery agreements, and whether regulators address the deeper revenue-collection and tariff issues driving remittance gaps.

    Source: The Punch — December 16, 2025 (https://punchng.com/n100bn-unpaid-reps-move-against-three-discos/)

  • FG Defers Bulk of 2025 Capital Projects into 2026

    Reports indicate that a large portion of 2025 capital projects may spill into 2026, intensifying debate over implementation bottlenecks and annual budget realism.

    Stakeholders are likely to call for clearer prioritisation and tighter execution timelines to prevent mounting project backlogs.

    2025-12-09

    Punch

    2025-12-09