Sign Up to our social questions and Answers Engine to ask questions, answer people’s questions, and connect with other people.
Login to our social questions & Answers Engine to ask questions answer people’s questions & connect with other people.
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.
should Nigerians be worried about the continuous borrowings by the FGN ?
Yes — Nigerians should be concerned, but also not panic. Borrowing itself is not bad, but continuous borrowing without strong results becomes dangerous. Let’s break this down clearly. What Happened Today (March 31, 2026) Reports today indicate that Nigeria's Senate received/approved a $6 billion extRead more
Yes — Nigerians should be concerned, but also not panic.
Borrowing itself is not bad, but continuous borrowing without strong results becomes dangerous.
Let’s break this down clearly.
What Happened Today (March 31, 2026)
Reports today indicate that Nigeria’s Senate received/approved a $6 billion external borrowing request from President Bola Tinubu. The loan is expected to boost government liquidity and fund critical infrastructure projects.
About $5 billion is planned through a financing arrangement
Funds are intended to support government spending and infrastructure
The loan will be disbursed in phases
This is not the first borrowing:
In 2025, Nigeria approved over $21 billion borrowing plan to fund budget gaps and projects.
Nigeria also continues borrowing due to large budget deficits and revenue shortfalls.
Why Nigeria Keeps Borrowing
There are 3 main reasons:
1. Government Revenue is Too Low
Nigeria earns less compared to its spending:
2026 budget revenue projected around ₦34 trillion
Spending projected over ₦54 trillion
This creates huge deficit financed by borrowing
This means:
Nigeria spends more than it earns → So it borrows
2. Debt Servicing is Already Very High
A large part of Nigeria’s budget goes into paying old debts:
About ₦15.9 trillion projected for debt servicing in 2026 �
Reuters
This is dangerous because:
More borrowing → more future repayment
More repayment → less money for development
3. Infrastructure Funding
Government argues borrowing is needed for:
Roads
Power
Rail
Ports
Infrastructure development
This is good only if money is properly used.
Should Nigerians Be Worried?
Yes — Nigerians should be concerned because:
1. Future Taxes May Increase
Borrowed money must be repaid through:
Taxes
Oil revenue
Government earnings
This means citizens eventually pay.
2. Naira Pressure
Too much external borrowing:
Increases dollar demand
Weakens naira
Raises inflation
3. Debt Trap Risk
If Nigeria keeps borrowing to pay old debts, it becomes dangerous.
This is called Debt Trap:
Borrow → repay → borrow again → repeat
But Borrowing is Not Always Bad
Countries like:
USA
UK
China
All borrow heavily — but they:
Invest productively
Grow economy
Repay comfortably
So borrowing becomes dangerous only when:
Corruption exists
Projects not completed
No economic growth
What Nigerians Should Be Asking Government Now
This is the most important part.
Nigerians should ask:
1. What Exactly is the Loan For?
Roads?
Electricity?
Rail?
Education?
There must be clear project breakdown
2. How Will It Be Repaid?
Oil revenue?
Tax increase?
Economic growth?
Government must explain repayment plan.
3. What Happened to Previous Loans?
This is critical:
Were previous loans used properly?
Which projects were completed?
4. Why Not Increase Revenue Instead?
Government should:
Block leakages
Increase productivity
Boost exports
Not just borrowing.
The Real Situation (Simple Truth)
Nigeria is not yet in danger — but the trend is worrying.
The real risk is:
Continuous borrowing
Low revenue
High debt servicing
If not controlled, it can slow economic growth and increase hardship.
My Balanced Conclusion
Borrowing is:
Not bad ✔️
But too much borrowing is risky ⚠️
Borrowing without results is dangerous 🚨
Nigerians should not panic, but should demand accountability.
Since you’ve been asking about:
Taxes
Investments
Economy
You’re clearly thinking about financial security, which is smart — especially when government debt is rising.
See less