Concerned about the indiscriminate borrowing by state governments from banks and the capital market, the Federal Government has initiated steps to monitor such borrowing.
As a result, the Fiscal Responsibility Commission, FRC, has released guidelines outlining the conditions that a state government must fulfill before borrowing from any bank in the country.
Barrister Charles Abana, the Head, Directorate of Legal, Investigation and Enforcement at the Fiscal Responsibility Commission, disclosed this at the Growth Initiative for Fiscal Transparency, GIFT, Parley with Civil Society Partners, in Abuja, yesterday.
The commission he said was shocked to find out that most banks in the country lure state governments into securing loans.
His words: “At the commission, we have decided to give them the template and we will go ahead to make sure that the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, issues a proper guideline to banks on how to go about getting all the necessary requirements and compliance fulfilled before lending to the states, unlike the past when they just go to the minister and the Debt Management Office, DMO.
“If we don’t put some checks on them, and make it not-too-easy for them to borrow, I don’t think we will come out of this debt situation.
“We had a meeting in Lagos with banks to study debt patterns, how do banks give out loans, and how they recover it. At the meeting, it was revealed that as soon as state governors constitute their cabinets bank officials swoop on them with mouth-watering offers to lure them into borrowing from the banks.”
Speaking on the 2024-2026 Medium Term Expenditure Framework, MTEF, Abana noted that “the country’s fiscal deficit (including project-tied loans) as a percentage of GDP will keep increasing over the medium term from 3.83 percent, 3.89 percent, and 3.92 percent respectively of the projected GDP.
“Borrowing will increase over the three years while foreign borrowing will increase in the first two years of the medium term.
Source: Vanguard