Economic professionals have urged the Federal Government to examine a debt moratorium and lower the cost of governance to reduce funds expended on debt servicing.
The Head of Department of Economics, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Prof. Sherifdeen Tella, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, said the Federal Government should demand a debt moratorium from our development partners.
“Asking for a moratorium is the best because it will enable the government to suspend payment for now and re-strategise.
“The government cannot continue to service its rising debt profile at the expense of meeting the competing needs of the people,” he said.
Tella commented that requesting debt a moratorium was vital because it would ensure government plans and invests in the productive sectors of the economy.
He added that the Federal Government should desist from borrowing and creatively look inwards the economy.
“The authorities should charge the ministries, departments and agencies of the government to be innovative in generating funds.
“Particularly, the money-spinning ones, to block all leakages and automate their operations so as to raise funds,” he said.
A former Executive Secretary, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria, Dr Uju Ogubunka, said, “Spending huge sums on debt servicing will put unnecessary pressure on government revenue.
“This simply means that the government revenue position is quite critical and providing public goods might be negated,” Ogubunka said.
He added, “Cutting down the high cost of public officeholders is crucial to reducing the paraphernalia of their office.
“We expect that by now the Federal Government ought to have implemented the Steve Oronsaye report so as to reduce cost,” he said.
He noted that the Federal Government could enhance its earnings by total removal of petroleum subsidy.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said the Federal Government could spend as much as 92.6 per cent of its revenue on debt servicing this year.
It also estimated last year’s debt servicing-to-revenue ratio at 85.5 per cent.
As of the end of September 2021, the debt-servicing-to-revenue ratio stood at 76 per cent, implying that 76k out of every N1 earned by the government was spent on payment of interest on debts.