IMF REPRIMANDS TINUBU GOVT: Borrow $5b From UAE Lender At Own Risk, Your Reform Benefits Yet To Reach Millions Of Nigerians


*Loan Being Sought Is To Refinance Debt, Pay For Infrastructure

*Poverty Level Now 63%, Millions Hungry, It Says

International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday warned of risks ​surrounding Nigeria’s plan to borrow up to $5 billion through a derivatives agreement with ‌First Abu Dhabi Bank, saying such transactions are often opaque and complex, according to a report in Reuters.

Senate in April gave its approval to the agreement, joining other African borrowers like Senegal and Angola who have ​tapped similar arrangements over the past year.

“Our view is that the transaction ​in these types of structures carry risks. Usually they are opaque ⁠so the terms are not always very transparent when we reviewed these instruments ​across countries,” IMF Resident Representative in Nigeria, Christian Ebeke, told reporters.

Ebeke said Nigeria could instead ​issue eurobonds to finance its deficits or other means to raise funding, including on concessional terms.

The government of President Bola Tinubu intends to use proceeds from the total return swap (TRS) to refinance expensive debt and ​pay for infrastructure.

In its latest Article IV review, IMF, however, praised Nigeria’s sweeping ​reforms, saying they had strengthened economic stability and investor confidence, but warned that the benefits had ‌yet ⁠to reach millions of citizens and could be undermined by global shocks, including the Middle East conflict which had sent fuel prices spiking globally.

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The reforms since 2023 under President Tinubu – including fuel subsidy removal, tighter monetary policy and exchange rate liberalisation – had rebuilt buffers and improved macroeconomic ​management, the IMF said.

But, it cautioned that ⁠the reforms were also contributing to social strain, with poverty levels at 63% and millions facing food insecurity, underscoring a ​widening gap between macro gains and household realities.

The IMF said ​improved policy ⁠credibility and forex reforms had helped Nigeria regain access to international capital markets and attract portfolio inflows, while reducing risk premiums. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had said gross reserves are at $50 ⁠billion, ​the highest in 17 years.

But reliance on volatile foreign ​portfolio investment poses rollover risks, the IMF said, urging a shift towards more stable, long-term capital such ​as foreign direct investment.


By Felix Duru Mbah

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