Africa

 Nigeria to pay extra $4bn if loan-bond swap is denied – Buhari

Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari, says Africa’s larg­est economy will have to pay 1.8 trillion naira ($4bn) extra interest this year if parliament rejects a loan-to-bond swap request on the central bank’s overdrafts to the government.

Buhari made the comments in his budget speech to parliament after signing the 2023 budget into law on Tuesday.

In December, the Senate delayed a decision on the president’s request to convert $53bn worth of central bank overdrafts to the government into 40-year bonds after some lawmakers questioned the plan.

In his speech on Tuesday, Buhari said the government was paying a 3 per cent margin above the central bank’s lending rate of 16.5 per cent, but his administration has negotiated a rate of 9 per cent for the bonds.

Lawmakers increased the size of the 2023 budget by 6.4 per cent to 21.83 trillion naira ($49bn) after they raised the assumed oil price benchmark to $75 a barrel from $70.

“Considering the imminent transition process … I decided to sign the 2023 appropriation bill into law … to enable its implementation to commence without delay,” the president said, referring to a general elec­tion coming up in February.

Having completed the maxi­mum two terms allowed by the constitution, Buhari was not standing for re-election.

Rising debt, weak econom­ic growth, high inflation and mounting insecurity were major issues for many Nigerian voters.

The International Monetary Fund has urged Nigeria to phase out central bank financing of the government to help reduce double-digit inflation.

Economists have said Nige­ria’s government was spending more money on debt repay­ments than on education and health, but Buhari has said his government had no choice but to borrow its way out of two re­cessions in the past seven years.

SOURCE: NEWS AGEN­CIES

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