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Public debt rises to N82 trillion after naira unification

President Bola Tinubu during a campaign rally


Nigeria’s total public debt rose by fiat to N82 trillion following the unification of the naira. It was N73 trillion before the unification.

The central bank of Nigeria issued a press release titled Operational Changes to the Foreign Exchange Market, signaling a unification of the multiple exchange rates.

This is in line with the instruction of the president, Bola Ahmed Tinubu who first announced this as a policy change in his inauguration broadcast.

However, the implementation of the scheme which saw the exchange rate first depreciate to N662/$1 attracts several consequences for the economy one of which includes the automatic increase of the public debt.

Nigeria’s Public Debt Profile.
Source: Nairametrics

Impact on Public Debt

Before now, the nation’s public debt was quoted at N448.50/$1 by the Debt Management Office as the official exchange rate but this has now been depreciated to N662/$1.

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But while the naira portion of the loan increases the dollar value drops.

Other considerations

It is important to note that the actual obligations of the public debt do not change as Nigeria still needs to pay the debt of $41.6 billion in foreign currency and not in naira.

Thus the conversion is purely for the purposes of reporting.

While the public debt is expected to increase when converted, the government’s revenue profile is also likely to rise.

Why Public debt is in naira and dollars

Public debt refers to the total amount of money that a government owes to domestic and foreign creditors.

Why multiple currencies? The use of multiple currencies in denominating public debt serves specific purposes.

On the other hand, denominating public debt in foreign currency (such as dollars) provides access to international capital markets and a broader investor base.

The mix of naira and dollar-denominated public debt reflects the government’s need for a balanced approach that considers both domestic and international borrowing conditions.

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