Close Menu
Fishe News
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • International
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • PMNI
  • More
    • Business
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Health
  • Featured
    • Fishe Travel
    • Fishe Media
    • Fishe TV
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya
  • Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson
  • JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs
  • Protecting Children In The Digital Age
  • Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD
  • “Obasanjo Reignites Debate On NNPC Refineries, Says They May Never Work Again”
  • “Airlines Threaten Shutdown As Jet Fuel Prices Soar Above ₦3,000”
  • Sustaining Momentum: Evaluating Progress In The DRC–Rwanda Peace Process
X (Twitter) Instagram
Fishe NewsFishe News
Subscribe
Thursday, April 30
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • International
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • PMNI
  • More
    • Business
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Health
  • Featured
    • Fishe Travel
    • Fishe Media
    • Fishe TV
Fishe News
Home»National

“Fiscal Pressure Mounts As Debt Service Under Tinubu Set To Top ₦91 Trillion”

“Escalating debt obligations are set to consume a growing share of federal revenue, raising concerns over fiscal sustainability and funding for development projects.”
Adejuyigbe AdegokeBy Adejuyigbe AdegokeJanuary 13, 2026 National No Comments3 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp

Nigeria’s fiscal landscape is under mounting pressure as the cost of servicing public debt under President Bola Tinubu’s administration is projected to exceed ₦91 trillion between 2023 and 2028 — a stark indicator of the country’s widening fiscal deficits, weak revenue performance, and rising borrowing costs.

Rising Debt Service: The Numbers

According to budget data and projections contained in the Medium‑Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) 2026–2028:

  • The federal government significantly undershot its debt service targets in the past two years, with actual outlays far exceeding budgeted amounts. In 2023, the government spent ₦8.56 trillion on debt servicing versus a budget of ₦6.56 trillion, and in 2024 it spent ₦12.63 trillion against a ₦8.27 trillion allocation.

  • For 2025, ₦14.32 trillion has been budgeted for debt service, but early performance suggests the government may surpass that figure again.

  • Projections show debt service rising to ₦15.9 trillion in 2026, and further to ₦19.8 trillion in both 2027 and 2028. While total budgeted spending on debt service across these six years is about ₦84.6 trillion, historical overshoots are expected to push the actual figure above ₦91 trillion.





This trajectory underscores the growing claims that debt obligations are becoming one of the most significant draws on federal finances.

What’s Driving This Surge?

Several interlinked factors explain why debt service is outpacing expectations:

1. Weak and Volatile Revenue
Government revenues have repeatedly fallen short of projections, which forces policymakers to borrow more to cover recurrent costs and deficits. For example, in 2024, actual government revenue of ₦20.98 trillion was nearly ₦5 trillion below budget targets.

Similarly, in the first seven months of 2025, pro‑rated revenue was about ₦13.6 trillion, far below the expected ₦23.8 trillion.

2. Rising Debt Stock and Borrowing Costs
Both domestic and external debt have climbed sharply: domestic debt expanded from ₦54.3 trillion in 2022 to ₦80.5 trillion, while external debt rose to $46.9 billion (about ₦71.8 trillion).

High interest rates — with government borrowing costs north of 20% — further amplify debt servicing costs, especially as older, cheaper debts are refinanced at higher rates.

3. Fiscal Deficits and Over‑Borrowing
Persistent budget deficits push the government to borrow more, and data suggests borrowing often exceeds approved targets, heightening the risk of a self‑reinforcing debt cycle.

The Cost to Development

The dominance of debt service in the budget has tangible consequences:
  • Capital expenditure is under pressure — historically lower capital releases compared with debt payments mean funds for infrastructure, healthcare, and education are squeezed. In 2025, pro‑rated capital spending was just ₦3.59 trillion, far below debt service, which has already exceeded projections.

  • Debt service is consuming a growing share of federal revenue, which in 2025 amounted to over 70% in the first seven months, crowding out other expenditures.

This situation stifles long‑term development initiatives and may constrain economic growth if not addressed.

Outlook: What Comes Next?

Unless significant reforms are implemented, analysts warn that debt service will continue to dominate Nigeria’s fiscal framework:

  • Revenue reforms — broadening the tax base, stabilising oil revenue streams, and strengthening non‑oil revenues — are essential to ease reliance on borrowing.

  • Debt strategy and cost management — including restructuring costly domestic debts and securing concessional financing, can help lower servicing costs.

  • Fiscal discipline — curbing excessive borrowing and ensuring budgets align with realistic revenue expectations will be critical.

In sum, the projection that debt service will exceed ₦91 trillion by 2028 is both a reflection of current fiscal trends and a clarion call for stronger economic governance to protect Nigeria’s development priorities.

#Francis ₦91 Trillion 2023 2028 Ad Agency Adegoke Adejuyigbe BRT Debt fiscal Fishe Media Fishe News Marketing Comms MTEF Positioning PR Pressure Tinubu Train Branding Travel Agency
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
Adejuyigbe Adegoke
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Publisher.

Keep Reading

Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya

Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson

JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs

Protecting Children In The Digital Age

Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD

“Obasanjo Reignites Debate On NNPC Refineries, Says They May Never Work Again”

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Here is spotlighting many benefits of journeying with either Lagos State’s Blueline or Redline rails for a hassle-free day, week, month and year. Thank God for the Igbega Eko. Together we rise.
https://youtu.be/V67GV8wgyjw

Latest Posts

  • Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya
  • Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson
  • JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs
  • Protecting Children In The Digital Age
  • Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD
Featured
About Fishe

FISHE was founded with the goal of helping clients thrive in today’s highly competitive marketing environment. While other companies rush to abandon traditional marketing in favour of digital techniques, we’ve bolstered our offline marketing capabilities while also equipping our team with seasoned professional knowledge to support our clients’ digital needs.

Through creative designs, we enhance our clients’ products and services the right way that would attract their target audience, thus, making the perception of their company a reality.

  • LTV 8, Agidingbi Road, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos.
  • +234 806 003 7277
  • info@gofishe.com
FISHE, Your Best Plug For Bus Stop Shelter Ad

LATEST POSTS

Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya

April 29, 2026

Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson

April 29, 2026

JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs

April 29, 2026

Protecting Children In The Digital Age

April 27, 2026

Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD

April 27, 2026
Featured

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from FISHE about politics, economy, health and business, etc

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
© 2026

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.