The Lagos State Government owes 33.86 per cent of the country’s total
sub-national external debts (debts owed by state governments),
investigation has shown.
Statistics obtained from the website of
the Debt Management Office in Abuja on Wednesday showed that out of the
total external debt of $3.01bn, Lagos State owed $1.02bn, leaving the
remaining 35 states and the Federal Capital Territory with $1.99bn as of
June 30, 2014.
Further analysis shows that out of Lagos’s
$1.02bn external loan commitments, $937.91m was from multilateral
bodies, while $82.5m represented loans contracted from bilateral
sources.
With a series of loan deals, the World Bank in
particular has been involved in the urban renewal programme of Lagos
State as well as efforts to reform the policy environment.
Some
of the latest approvals by the World Bank for the state include $42m
loan deal approved by its Board of Executive Directors in March to
support secondary education programme in the state.
The new
International Development Association credit of $42m to the Lagos EKO
Secondary School Project was an addition to the original credit of $95m;
which was said to have systematically benefited over 620,000 students a
year in 667 public secondary schools in the state between 2009 and
2013.
The school loan was shortly followed by an approval of
$200m to the state to support reforms pertaining to fiscal
sustainability, budget planning, budget execution and the investment
climate.
According to the World Bank, the loan is the first in
two development policy operations and it builds upon the policy reforms
initiated under a previous bank supported programme.
It added
that the goal of the programme was to assist Lagos State in sustaining
the strong momentum it had achieved in improving public services,
facilitating inclusive growth and reducing poverty.
This includes
measures to monitor and manage financial risks more effectively, ensure
adequate growth in revenues, get better value for money in public
expenditures, and improve institutions and processes for land
registration and development permits.
Attempts to speak to the
Lagos State Government officials on the status of its external loans
failed as repeated calls to the Commissioner of Finance, Mr. Ayo
Gbeleyi, were not picked, neither did he respond to text messages sent
to his mobile telephone number.
Similarly, a text message to the
state’s Commissioner of Information, Mr. Lateef Ibirogba, was not
responded to. Calls to his mobile number could not go through.
Other
major holders of the country’s external sub-national debts include
Kaduna State, which owes $245.51m, and Cross Rivers State, $120.21m.
Others are Ogun, $116.69m; Bauchi, $111.61m; and Oyo, $80.11m.
The
states least exposed to foreign debts are Borno, $16.07m; Plateau,
$22.99m; Taraba, $24.06m; Delta, $24.7m and Benue, $28.79m.
However,
in comparison to the nation’s total external indebtedness, the states
owe only 32.13 per cent; leaving the Federal Government with 67.87 per
cent of the total $9.38bn.
Loans from the China Export Import
Bank and money raised from the Eurobond accounted for $2.54bn of the
Federal Government’s $6.36bn external debt, while multilateral sources
accounted for $3.82bn.
As of June 2013, the nation’s total
external loan stood at $6.92bn. This means that over a period of one
year, it rose by $2.46bn, indicating a 35.51 per cent increase.
http://www.punchng.com/news/lagos-owes-1bn-of-states-3bn-external-debts/
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