Business

Nigeria’s Debt Ratio ‘Improves’ to 39.4% — But Don’t Celebrate Yet

Mathematically Better. Economically the Same.

Byline: IDNN Economy Desk

Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio dropped from 52.1% to 39.4% after a comprehensive GDP rebasing — but analysts aren’t clapping.

The National Bureau of Statistics now calculates GDP using 2019 as base year, expanding economic scope to capture fintech, gig work, and informal trade. That raised GDP to ₦379.17tn.

But public debt remains ₦149.39tn — meaning while the ratio looks better, the interest, repayments, and external exposure have all worsened.

Nigeria debt-to-GDP ratio Mathematically Better. Economically the Same.
Nigeria’s Debt Ratio ‘Improves’ to 39.4% — But Don’t Celebrate Yet

False Comfort?

“This is not fiscal improvement. It’s statistical recalibration,” warned economist Bisi Sobowale.

Debt servicing costs are near unsustainable levels, consuming over 90% of revenue in 2024. The naira’s fall has ballooned dollar-denominated debt, and new borrowings remain high.

IMF and World Bank thresholds may look safe — but Nigeria is walking a thin line between solvency and debt distress.

“Debt-to-GDP is a vanity metric if revenue’s broken,” Sobowale added

Also See

Maktown Flyers arrive in Morocco for Basketball Africa League playoffs

Noble Onyeagoro

INEC Drops Bombshell: “You Can Recall Natasha Akpoti a Million Times—No Law Against It!”

IDNN

Senate Defies Court, Blocks Natasha Akpoti — ‘This Is Contempt,’ She Fires Back

IDNN

Eric Chelle Addresses Contract Uncertainty Amid Opposition and Leaks

Noble Onyeagoro

NPFL Title Race on Fire: Rivers United Sink Remo Stars, Enyimba Roars Back, Fans Hold Ikorodu City Hostage

IDNN

Super Falcons Defeat Cameroon 3-1 in Friendly, Prepare for 2026 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations

Noble Onyeagoro

This website uses cookies to improve User experience. Accept Learn More

Our Policies