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FG pushes for N17.89tn new loans to finance 2026 budget

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The Federal Government plans to borrow N17.89tn in 2026 to fund a widening budget deficit as revenue projections fall sharply below expenditure needs, according to the 2026 budget framework obtained from the Budget Office of the Federation.

Official figures in the 2026 Abridged Budget Call Circular issued by the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning show that total new borrowing will jump from N10.42tn in 2025 to N17.89tn in 2026. This is an increase of N7.46tn (72 per cent) in fresh loans over one year, amid concerns over rising debt costs.

The borrowing requirement is driven by a larger fiscal deficit and a weaker revenue outlook, even though overall expenditure is projected to fall slightly compared with the current year. The framework puts the 2026 fiscal deficit at N20.12tn, up from N14.10tn approved for 2025.

This represents an increase of N6.02tn, or about 43 per cent year-on-year. Despite this jump in the nominal deficit, the deficit to gross domestic product ratio is projected to decline from 4.17 per cent in 2025 to 3.61 per cent in 2026, reflecting a higher projected GDP base. The deficit ratio is expected to ease further to 3.24 per cent in 2027 and 1.92 per cent in 2028.

Revenue figures explain why the government is resorting to much larger borrowing. The amount available for the federal budget, excluding the retained revenue of government-owned enterprises, is projected to fall from N38.02tn in 2025 to N29.35tn in 2026.

This is a drop of N8.67tn or about 23 per cent between the two years. The government expects revenue to recover modestly to N31.53tn in 2027 and N34.90tn in 2028.

That implies growth of about seven per cent between 2026 and 2027 and about 11 per cent between 2027 and 2028, but the recovery is not strong enough to remove the need for heavy borrowing in the medium term.

The PUNCH further observed that the bulk of the 2026 borrowing will come from domestic creditors. The document shows that of the planned N17.89tn new loans for 2026, N14.31tn will be raised from the domestic market, while N3.58tn will be sourced from external creditors. Domestic borrowing, therefore, accounts for 80 per cent of new loans in 2026, while foreign borrowing contributes 20 per cent.

This strong tilt towards the local market is not new. In 2025, domestic borrowing is put at N8.58tn out of total new loans of N10.42tn, which is about 82 per cent of the borrowing requirement. External borrowing of N1.84tn makes up the remaining 18 per cent.

The same pattern is projected to continue after 2026. In 2027, the Federal Government plans to borrow N21.18tn, comprising N16.94tn in domestic debt and N4.24tn in external loans.

Domestic borrowing thus remains at 80 per cent of the total, with foreign loans at 20 per cent. In 2028, planned borrowing drops to N15.84tn, but the structure remains almost unchanged, with N12.67tn expected from domestic creditors and N3.17tn from external lenders, again roughly 80 and 20 per cent respectively.

When the numbers for the three budget years are added together, the scale of reliance on debt becomes clearer. Between 2026 and 2028, the Federal Government plans to borrow N54.91tn in total. Domestic creditors are expected to provide N43.92tn of this amount, while external creditors will supply N10.98tn.

This means domestic borrowing will account for exactly 80 per cent of new loans over the three-year period, with external debts making up the remaining 20 per cent. Year-on-year analysis of borrowing after 2026 shows a continued heavy dependence on debt, even though the trend turns downward towards the end of the period.

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From 2026 to 2027, total new borrowing rises from N17.89tn to N21.18tn, an increase of about N3.29tn or roughly 18 per cent. Between 2027 and 2028, planned borrowing falls from N21.18tn to N15.84tn, a decline of about N5.34tn or roughly 25 per cent.

Debt service costs are also rising. According to the framework, debt service is projected at N13.94tn for 2025 and N15.52tn for 2026, an increase of N1.58tn, or about 11 per cent year-on-year.

The burden of these payments relative to revenue is captured in the debt service to revenue ratio. For 2025, the ratio is put at 34 per cent. In 2026, it is forecast to jump to 45 per cent, meaning nearly one naira out of every two naira of revenue available to the Federal Government will be used to pay interest and principal on existing debt.

The ratio is projected to rise further to 53 per cent in 2027 before easing to 47 per cent in 2028. Total federal expenditure is expected to edge down from N54.99tn in 2025 to N54.46tn in 2026, but the composition of spending continues to tilt towards recurrent items and debt service.

Recurrent non-debt expenditure is projected to rise from N13.59tn in 2025 to N15.27tn in 2026. Within this, personnel costs for ministries and departments will take N8.36tn, while pensions, gratuities, and retirees’ benefits will cost N1.38tn. Other service-wide votes, including key national programmes, will rise from N1.06tn in 2025 to N1.85tn in 2026.

Capital expenditure is set to fall from N26.19tn in 2025 to N22.37tn in 2026. The reduction is linked to a policy decision that ministries and agencies will roll over 70 per cent of their 2025 capital allocations into 2026 rather than seek fresh approvals for the same projects.

Capital spending is projected to recover slightly to N23.28tn in 2027 and then ease to N21.26tn in 2028. Even with this sizeable capital envelope, the combination of recurrent spending and debt service still dominates the budget and squeezes the room for new infrastructure.

Other financing items are relatively small when compared with the borrowing figures. Privatisation proceeds are projected at N312.33bn in 2025 and are expected to fall to N189.16bn in 2026. They are then forecast to rise modestly to N197.23bn in 2027 and jump to N486.54bn in 2028.

Even at that peak level, privatisation receipts would still amount to less than three per cent of total financing. Project-tied loans from multilateral and bilateral partners are also expected to decline from N3.36tn in 2025 to N2.05tn in 2026, then to N1.17tn in 2027, and N556.66bn in 2028.

Speaking earlier in separate interviews with The PUNCH, experts said the deficit, which represents more than one-third of the proposed N54.43tn spending envelope, raises fresh questions about debt sustainability, fiscal discipline, and the government’s ability to manage inflationary and exchange rate pressures in 2026.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, said Nigeria must be cautious not to destroy the fragile stability achieved in recent months.

He warned that high deficits and rising debt levels pose a serious threat. Yusuf said he was worried about what he described as the risk of a debt trap, stating that “we need to worry about debt sustainability” because “high levels of deficits and high levels of debt… can choke the fiscal space and lead to a kind of vicious circle of debt.”

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He explained that Nigeria has only recently regained some macroeconomic footing and that any disruption could quickly worsen inflation and exchange rate pressures.

According to him, “we already have a reasonable level of macroeconomic stability” and “once we lose that recovery… it will create even more problems because that is where the problem of inflationary pressure will come and that is where the pressure on the exchange rate will come.”

Yusuf said the government had claimed that revenue performance was improving and urged it to take advantage of the gains to cut the deficit rather than expand it. He argued that Nigeria must “leverage on the improved revenue situation to moderate the level of deficit and the level of debt exposure so that we don’t put at risk the macroeconomic stability that we have achieved.”

He added that the systemic effects of macro instability would be severe and urged the government to handle deficit planning with extreme caution.

Also, the National President of the Nigerian Economic Society, Professor Adeola Adenikinju, warned that borrowing heavily from domestic markets would crowd out the private sector and raise interest rates.

He said, “If you borrow from the public… interest rates will go up” because government borrowing increases demand for credit and banks may prefer to lend to the government rather than to businesses. He said this would slow investment and worsen economic hardship.

Adenikinju also questioned the quality of government spending. He said debt was not necessarily bad if it funded productive projects, but Nigeria’s capital releases often come too late to deliver meaningful development outcomes.

Experts at a national debt dialogue in Abuja on Tuesday warned that Nigeria is accumulating liabilities that future generations will inherit without seeing the development that borrowing is supposed to bring.

“At the end of the day, all of these debts, our children will have to inherit them,” the Programme Manager of the Sustainable Nigeria Programme at Heinrich Böll Stiftung, Mr Ikenna Ofoegbu, told participants.

The National Stakeholder Convening on Debt Sustainability and Climate Finance was hosted by the Centre for Inclusive Social Development with support from Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung.

Ofoegbu said decisions taken today were shaping the future of young Nigerians. “My children will have to contend with whatever that child becomes. And it would be in their interest that that child becomes responsible,” he said.

He said debt figures that appear in the news as abstract numbers have real implications. “As of this morning, when I checked, Nigeria’s debt profile is about N152.4bn. In the US dollar, that’s about $99.66bn,” he said.

He said the question citizens should ask was not only how much was being borrowed, but what was being achieved. “We started asking ourselves, what is the true cost of debt? When we borrow money, what exactly are we paying back?” he asked.

Ofoegbu linked the debt issue to climate disasters. “Those floods affected more than 33 states in Nigeria. Road infrastructures were gone. Farmlands were gone. Food was gone. And the cost of that particular flood was about $9.12bn,” he said. “Climate change has a way of destroying infrastructures. And at the end of the day, who pays? The future generation.”

He also warned about the high cost of borrowing in the economy. According to him, revenue is being swallowed by debt payments. “Our debt servicing is about 60 per cent to 70 per cent. It has come down from about 80 per cent to 90 per cent. So now we’re about 60 per cent to 70 per cent,” he said.

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He criticised the lack of transparency. “Unfortunately, we’re not dealing with the kind of leaders that we can trust whatever they say or their intentions. We cannot trust the system. We cannot trust our politicians,” he said. “I don’t know the last time we saw all these reports publicly.”

Ofoegbu added that capital spending was unclear. “Many of us may not know, but there’s no capital budget to begin with. I think the only person that seems to be working in my own eye view is Wike,” he said.

He urged citizens to take responsibility. “Nobody is coming to save Nigeria except us. This is where we belong. This is our home. And we’re going to fix Nigeria by repair or whatever means,” he said.

In his welcome address, the Executive Director of CISD, Mr Folahan Johnson, said the human impact of debt should not be ignored. “The true cost of debts is the out-of-school child, the out-of-school girl,” he said. “The true cost of debts is that a woman who has to do business loses her life because of lack of access to basic maternal health care.”

Johnson said those present represented the group that could influence change. “We are here today because we are the new elite. Everybody in this room is the hope that the vulnerable Nigerian has,” he said. He recalled seeing a boy begging and asked, “What does the future hold for this little boy? Does he even know the consequences of the decisions that are being made today?”

BudgIT’s Acting Country Director, Mr Joseph Amenaghawon, said borrowing was not translating into development. “The result is debt without development. The cycle where the burden grows but the benefits do not,” he said.

He argued that loans were being used for recurrent spending rather than transformative projects. “Borrowing should build infrastructures at rising rates, systems of high use, climate resilient communities, and a diversified and productive economy,” he said.

He warned that young people were being left behind. “A generation borrowed but not invested in,” he told participants. “For every loan that remains unaccounted for, a potential generation of youth is left behind.”

He cited the 1980s Lagos Metro Line as an example of how debt failed to deliver. “My question would then be to myself, did I eventually become part of those who paid that debt by actually being a resident of Lagos State? And my parents also paid taxes,” he said.

Amenaghawon said the issue was deeper than debt alone. “What we face today is not simply a debt problem but a structural development crisis. A crisis of priorities, a crisis of governance, a crisis of vision,” he said.

He said borrowing could be useful if properly managed. “Debt is not in itself a sin. Borrowing can and should be a tool for transformation,” he said. “Borrowing can become a boiling point for future generations while the coming benefits remain elusive.”

He urged strict monitoring of projects. “Each loan must be traceable, each project verifiable, each outcome measurable, and accessible to the community,” he said. He closed by calling for reform. “We can make debt a bridge to Nigeria’s future, not a burden. It is time for transparency, accountability, ambition, and justice,” he said.

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PSC opens portal for recruitment of 50,000 police constables

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The Police Service Commission has announced the commencement of a nationwide recruitment exercise for 50,000 Constables into the Nigeria Police Force, as part of a major initiative to strengthen community policing and enhance internal security across the country.

In a public announcement issued on Monday, the Sokoto State Police Command disclosed that the online application portal opened today, December 15, 2025, in line with a Presidential directive aimed at expanding the manpower base of the Force.

The recruitment exercise, the Commission stressed, is entirely free of charge, and applicants are advised to avoid unauthorised individuals or websites.

According to the statement, prospective candidates must be Nigerian citizens by birth, possess a valid National Identification Number (NIN), and be medically, physically and psychologically fit.

“Applicants must also be free from any criminal conviction or financial embarrassment and meet all other requirements outlined on the official recruitment portal.

“The recruitment covers two cadres: General Duty and Specialists. For the General Duty cadre, applicants must be between 18 and 25 years, possess a minimum of five credits in WAEC, SSCE or NECO (in not more than two sittings), including English Language and Mathematics, and meet the required height of 1.67 metres for males and 1.64 metres for females.

“Specialists, on the other hand, must be between 18 and 28 years, have at least four relevant credits, and possess recognised qualifications or trade test certificates with a minimum of three years’ practical experience in fields such as medical services, ICT, engineering, driving and motor mechanics,” the statement said.

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The PSC noted that the application portal will remain open for six weeks, closing at 11:59 pm on Sunday, January 25, 2026. Interested and qualified candidates are to apply exclusively through the official portal at npfapplication.psc.gov.ng, as multiple applications or attempts to influence the process will result in immediate disqualification.

The Sokoto State Police Command urged eligible Nigerians to take advantage of the opportunity to serve the nation and contribute to improved security, assuring that the recruitment process will be transparent and merit-based.

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Nigerian borders now better protected – Interior minister

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The Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, has said that Nigeria’s borders are now better protected, attributing the progress to President Bola Tinubu’s commitment to strengthening national security.

Tunji-Ojo spoke on Sunday in Lagos at the Theatre Arts and Motion Picture Practitioners Association of Nigeria Professional and Empowerment Summit 2025.

At the summit, themed “The Right Man in Governance: Advancing Mr President’s Renewed Hope Agenda,” the minister was honoured as TAMPAN Man of the Year in recognition of his performance in office.

The minister, who was represented by a former Ondo State Commissioner, Dayo Awude, said the Ministry of Interior had recorded significant improvements under the Tinubu administration in line with the Renewed Hope Agenda.

He listed prison reforms, strengthened border security architecture, the installation of e-gates at major airports, and innovations in passport administration as key milestones.

According to him, the ministry has also cleared about 200,000 passport application backlogs, a development he described as a major boost to public confidence in service delivery.

“I just cited the issue of passports as an example. That is how we all can see, we all can feel. The Honourable Minister has done much more than that.

“Today, if you go to our airport in Lagos, the MM2, we have the e-gates. If you go to Abuja, we have the e-gates. You don’t have to have any contact with any immigration officer harassing you and asking you questions unnecessarily.

“As long as you’re a citizen and you have your passport, just scan it, then you go. I think that is the way to go. Of course, our borders are better protected today.

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“The correctional facilities are better than before. He has done well in every sector,” he said.

Responding to questions on the clearance of the 200,000 passports, he said the challenge was inherited from the previous administration but had to be tackled because “it ought not to be.”

“Well, it was the previous administration, definitely. I think somebody then did not do his job, or could not do his job, or did not have what was required to do that job.

“And when the young man came, he was able to demonstrate that, no, we can get this done. And he did it,” he said.

The minister, while responding to the honour, described members of TAMPAN as the “conscience of the nation” and charged them to be more creative and original in their profession.

Earlier, in his welcome address, the Global President of TAMPAN, Bolaji Amusan, commended Tunji-Ojo for bringing clarity, innovation and renewed purpose to the ministry.

Amusan, popularly known as Mr Latin, noted that the minister’s reforms had helped to restore public confidence in services that directly affect millions of Nigerians at home and abroad.

According to him, beyond institutional reforms, the minister had shown uncommon courage and accountability in leadership by insisting on standards and placing national interest above convenience.

He added that Tunji-Ojo’s performance aligns clearly with Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, describing it as a practical demonstration of how effective leadership can strengthen institutions and deliver sustainable outcomes.

Amusan also noted that the creative industry is not only an economic driver but a powerful tool for social reorientation, value projection and national unity, positioning it as a strategic partner in governance and nation-building.

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He further clarified that the recognition associated with the summit was neither commercial nor routine, but a rare honour reserved for individuals whose leadership has made a lasting national impact.

The TAMPAN president urged members of the association and stakeholders in the creative sector to embrace professionalism, unity and higher standards, while aligning their creative output with national purpose.

Some highlights of the event included a drama performance by the national troupe of TAMPAN and a colourful parade by members of the association’s state branches.

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Petrol price war turns dirty as Dangote attacks NMDPRA boss

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The President of the Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, on Sunday alleged that the Chief Executive of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, Farouk Ahmed, paid about $5m for the secondary school education of his four children in Switzerland, calling for a full investigation and public explanation.

Dangote said Ahmed must appear before the Code of Conduct Tribunal to explain to Nigerians how he was allegedly able to raise $5m for his children’s school fees, accusing him of economic sabotage.

Our correspondent reports that the NMDPRA dismissed a similar allegation when a group protested and alleged in July that Ahmed spent over $5.5m on the foreign education of his four children, insisting that the amount was grossly inconsistent with the earnings of a public official.

Reacting in July, the NMDPRA debunked all the allegations, describing them as an orchestrated smear campaign based on false allegations against Ahmed and its leadership.

Revisiting the allegation during a press briefing at the Dangote Petroleum Refinery in Lekki, Lagos, Dangote spoke extensively on what he described as regulatory failures and alleged corruption in the downstream petroleum sector.

While stressing that he was conveying issues brought to his attention, Dangote insisted that the allegation, if left unanswered, would continue to undermine public trust and investor confidence.

He said, “I’ve actually had people making complaints about a regulator who has actually put his children in secondary school.

“And that secondary school education, which is six years, four of them cost Nigeria $5m. I mean, you cannot imagine somebody paying $5m for educating four children.”

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Dangote said the alleged spending was difficult to reconcile with earnings from public service, adding that such a situation would ordinarily attract scrutiny from tax authorities.

“When you look at his income, his income does not match paying this kind of fee. And even if it’s me paying $5m for six years for my four children, the taxman has to look at my taxes and how much I pay,” he stated.

The billionaire businessman said he was particularly troubled by the contrast between the alleged expenditure and the hardship faced by ordinary Nigerians.

“From Sokoto, where he comes from, people are struggling to pay N100,000 for school fees. A lot of children are at home, not going to school, because of N100,000. I cannot understand why somebody who has worked all his life in government, and he has four children whose school fees he has paid $5m for,” he added.

Dangote emphasised that his own children did not attend secondary schools abroad, saying, “Even my own children, they didn’t go to those schools. My children went to a Nigerian secondary school. They didn’t go outside Nigeria to attend secondary school.

“I am not calling for his removal, but for a proper investigation. He should be required to account for his actions and demonstrate that he has not compromised his position to the detriment of Nigerians. What is happening amounts to economic sabotage.

“The Code of Conduct Bureau, or any other body deemed appropriate by the government, can investigate the matter. If he denies it, I will not only publish what he paid as tuition in those secondary schools, but I will also take legal steps to compel the schools to disclose the payments made by Farouk.”

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He described the downstream petroleum sector as being under severe strain, alleging the presence of entrenched interests that profit from fuel imports at the expense of national development.

“There are powerful interests in the oil sector. It is troubling that African countries continue to import refined products despite long-standing calls for value addition and domestic refining. The volume of imports being allowed into the country is unethical and does a disservice to Nigeria,” he added.

Dangote stressed the need for a clear separation between regulatory oversight and commercial interests, warning that allowing traders to influence regulation would undermine the integrity of the sector.

“The downstream sector must not be destroyed by personal interests. A trader should never be a regulator. 47 licences have been issued, yet no new refineries are being built because the environment is not conducive,” he said.

He maintained that Nigerians would ultimately benefit from local refining, even as fuel importers incur losses. Dangote said he would not relent in ensuring that Nigerians enjoy the benefits of domestic refining, noting that the company was working around the clock to ensure that recent reductions in the gantry price were fully reflected at the retail level.

When contacted for his reaction, the NMDPRA spokesman, George Ene-Ita, said, “For now, no comment.”

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