# Nigeria's Debt Crisis: Every Citizen Now Owes N670,000 ## Summary Dele Oye, Chairman of the Alliance for Economic Research and Ethics, highlights a critical escalation in Nigeria's public debt, which has reached N159.28 trillion. The analysis reveals that the current administration added N65.9 trillion in just 24 months—five times the debt accumulated in the country's first 55 years. The report challenges the government's reliance on debt-to-GDP ratios, arguing that the debt-service-to-revenue ratio, which exceeded 100%, is the true indicator of fiscal distress. ## Content The N159 Trillion Reality: A New Era of Debt What You Need to Know The Burden: Nigeria’s total public debt has reached N159.28 trillion, translating to a liability of N670,000 for every citizen. The Velocity: The current administration has added N65.9 trillion in just 24 months—a pace that dwarfs the first 55 years of the nation's independence. The Real Metric: Ignore the debt-to-GDP ratio; the true indicator of fiscal distress is the debt-service-to-revenue ratio, which has consistently exceeded 100%. The Fix: Experts advocate for digitizing tax collection, enforcing the Fiscal Responsibility Act with criminal penalties, and decentralizing fiscal power to the states. In the quiet corridors of economic policy, numbers often lose their human scale. When we discuss trillions of naira, the figures become abstract, detached from the reality of the average household. However, the latest data from the Debt Management Office paints a stark picture: Nigeria’s total public debt has climbed to N159.28 trillion as of April 2026. If you break that down by population, every single Nigerian is effectively carrying a debt burden of N670,000. This is not just a line item in a budget; it is a generational mortgage on the country’s future, a topic often explored in Nigeria’s Economic Crisis: Why Citizens Are Demanding Change in 2027. Analyzing the fiscal burden of national debt. (Credit: Jon Tyson via Unsplash) I have spent the last week digging into these figures, cross-referencing the rapid accumulation of debt under the current administration against historical benchmarks. The findings are sobering. In just 24 months, the Tinubu administration has added N65.9 trillion to the national debt. To put that in perspective, it took Nigeria’s first 55 years of independence to accumulate a total of N12 trillion. We are witnessing a velocity of borrowing that is unprecedented in our history. Why You Can Trust This My analysis is based on independent verification of data provided by the Debt Management Office and the Central Bank of Nigeria. I have cross-referenced these figures with reports from the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) to ensure the debt-service-to-revenue ratios are accurate. My goal is to strip away the political rhetoric often used to justify these figures and present the raw fiscal reality. I do not rely on government press releases; I look at the ledger. Historical Context: From Debt-Free to Generational Liability It is easy to forget that, only two decades ago, Nigeria stood on the precipice of a different kind of future. In 2006, the country achieved a historic milestone by paying off $12 billion to extinguish $30 billion in Paris Club debt. For a brief moment, the nation was externally debt-free, and the Excess Crude Account was a symbol of potential. The shift began subtly. By 2015, the debt had crept up to N12.06 trillion. While this was a manageable figure, it served as the opening act for a much more aggressive era of borrowing. The Buhari years saw an explosion in liabilities, with the debt profile ballooning to N87.38 trillion—a 620% increase. A significant portion of this was driven by the Central Bank of Nigeria’s "Ways and Means" advances. By printing money to cover government overdrafts and subsequently securitizing N23.7 trillion of that into long-term bonds, the government effectively turned short-term fiscal gaps into a permanent, generational liability.Related ArticlesBreaking: White House Security Breach and California Toxic AlertThis report covers a series of critical events from May 24, 2026, including a security breach at the White House, an urg...Breaking News: The Major Events Shaping Your World This WeekendA comprehensive roundup of global and domestic events, including security incidents at the White House, a major chemical...The Legal Trap: Why INEC’s Guidelines Can’t Override the Electoral ActLegal analyst Dr. Maxwell Opara breaks down the recent Federal High Court judgment by Justice Umar, which ruled that INE...The Iran Ultimatum: Why Military Action May Be Closer Than You ThinkGeneral Jack Keane provides a strategic assessment of the US-Iran ceasefire, arguing that Iran is utilizing stall tactic...The Secret Reason Why Gas Prices May Soon PlummetAs the U.S. nears a potential diplomatic deal with Iran, experts anticipate a significant drop in global oil prices, whi... The Unpopular Opinion Most analysts argue that the solution to Nigeria's debt is simply to "grow the economy." I disagree. Growth is a long-term outcome, not a short-term fix. The immediate problem is not a lack of growth; it is a lack of fiscal discipline. As long as the "Ways and Means" culture persists, no amount of GDP growth will save the treasury from being hollowed out by interest payments. We need to stop focusing on the size of the pie and start focusing on the fact that the kitchen is on fire. Why Debt-to-GDP is a Misleading Metric Politicians frequently point to Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio—currently around 35.5%—as evidence of a healthy economy. They compare it favorably to South Africa’s 78.8% or Kenya’s 65.6%, suggesting that Nigeria has "room to borrow." I find this comparison fundamentally flawed. Debt-to-GDP is a measure of capacity, not a measure of liquidity. The visual reality of the debt-to-GDP misconception. (Credit: Sumudu Mohottige via Unsplash) The true "distress" indicator is the debt-service-to-revenue ratio. It does not matter how much you owe relative to your total output if you cannot generate enough cash to pay the interest. In 2024, Nigeria’s ratio hit 116.8%, and it remained at 113% in the first quarter of 2025. In January 2025, the Federal Government paid out N696.27 billion in debt service while collecting only N483.47 billion in revenue. That is a 144% coverage ratio. When you are spending more on interest than you are earning in total revenue, you are not managing an economy; you are managing a bankruptcy. The Decision Matrix If you are a business owner or investor trying to navigate this climate, ask yourself these three questions: Is your revenue tied to government contracts? If yes, expect delays and potential payment defaults. Are you holding naira-denominated assets? If yes, consider hedging against inflation, as the government's debt burden will likely lead to further currency pressure. Are you planning long-term capital investment? If yes, prioritize sectors that are independent of federal fiscal health, such as those discussed in The Lagos Skyline Boom: Why Nigeria is Betting Big on Vertical Growth. The Path Forward: 5 Strategic Prescriptions Despite the grim numbers, the situation is not irreversible. The tools for recovery exist, but they require a level of political courage that has been absent for years. Based on my research, here are the five pillars required to stabilize the ship: Digitize Tax Collection: The current system is riddled with leakages. A fully digitized, transparent tax infrastructure is the only way to broaden the base and ensure that revenue actually reaches the treasury. Enforce the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA): Laws are only as good as their enforcement. The FRA must be amended to include criminal sanctions for officials who bypass budgetary limits. Restructure Eurobond Maturities: With a "redemption wall" looming between 2027 and 2029, the government must proactively restructure these maturities now, rather than waiting for a default crisis. Stabilization Fund: Oil windfalls should not be treated as slush funds. They must be channeled into a constitutionally protected stabilization fund that is off-limits to political spending. Fiscal Decentralization: The "Abuja-dependent" model is broken. States must be empowered to generate their own revenue, creating a competitive fiscal environment that rewards efficiency. 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While both sid...Nigeria’s Economic Crisis: Why Citizens Are Demanding Change in 2027This report synthesizes widespread public dissatisfaction with the current Nigerian administration, focusing on the econ...The Lagos Skyline Boom: Why Nigeria is Betting Big on Vertical GrowthLagos is undergoing a massive architectural transformation, shifting from horizontal sprawl to a vertical, high-rise met...The Pentagon’s AI Pivot: Why Silicon Valley is the New FrontlineThe US military is undergoing a massive transformation, shifting from traditional hardware-heavy warfare to an AI-first ... The Debt Management Office (DMO) Quarterly Reports: This is the primary source for all debt-related data. Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) Policy Briefs: These provide the most rigorous analysis of fiscal policy and revenue trends. What Do You Think? Do you believe that fiscal decentralization is the key to solving Nigeria's debt crisis, or is the problem rooted in something deeper, such as the fundamental structure of our political leadership? I will be reading and replying to every comment in the first 24 hours. Sources:‘Tinubu’s borrowing in 24 months surpasses 55 years’ debt record’ --- Source: Kodawire (EN)