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    Nigeria: Troops, DSS uncover IPOB/ESN arms cache, recover RPG launcher, rifles in Enugu

    Nigeria: Troops, DSS uncover IPOB/ESN arms cache, recover RPG launcher, rifles in Enugu

    Nigeria:  FG launches new revenue system to eliminate leakages, boost transparency

    Nigeria: Presidency disowns ‘Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council’

    AfDB approves $310m financial package for FirstRand Bank to scale up lending to MSMEs, women entrepreneurs, agribusinesses in South Africa

    AfDB commits $86m to agro-processing zones project in Nigeria

    Nigeria: Senate confirms three nominees as non-career ambassadors, two commissioners of NERC

    Nigeria: Senate issues arrest warrant on Mele Kyari over N210trn audit queries

    NNPCL grows profit by 64% to ₦5.4trn in 2024, as Ojulari pledges strategic investments to sustain growth into next decade

    Ex-NNPCL CFO says no N210trn missing

    Nigeria: Services sector leads GDP growth to 3.98% in Q3 2025 

    Nigeria’s external trade strengthens as export earnings drive ₦7.55trn trade surplus in Q1 2026

    Nigeria: Presidency dismisses alleged discrepancies in tax laws as fake

    Nigeria acknowledges IMF assessment, says reforms are strengthening economy

    IMF boss says AI has potential to boost global growth  

    IMF commends Nigeria’s reforms, projects 4.1% growth in 2026

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    NUT  worries over insecurity threatening Nigeria’s education future

  • Entertainment
    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

    Mixed reactions trail Davido’s appointment as youth mobiliser for Adeleke’s re-election campaign

    Davido set for induction into Black Music Walk Of Fame

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    NFC congratulates Funke Akindele as film ‘Behind The Scenes’ grosses over N2b at the box office

    NFVCB hails Funke Akindele on box office success of ‘Behind The Scene’

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    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    NUT  worries over insecurity threatening Nigeria’s education future

    Nigeria: Minister of Communications, Tijani unveils high-tech innovation hub at OAU

    Nigeria: Minister of Communications, Tijani unveils high-tech innovation hub at OAU

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    2026 National TVET Conference: Nigeria prioritises technical education to boost employment, industrial growth

    WAEC warns against candidate extortion

    UNIPORT appoints Prof. Chike as new VC

    UNIPORT appoints Prof. Chike as new VC

    Nigeria: FG cancels mother tongue policy, declares English sole medium of instruction in schools

    Nigeria: FG reaffirms commitment to advancing Tinubu’s agenda in education  

    UNICEF raises alarm over proliferation of sexualised images of youngsters by AI

    UNICEF says poverty, population surge strain Nigeria’s education system

    Taxing, Borrowing the Future Without Building: What has Nigeria’s fiscal authority done for the real sector?

    Tinubu commissions TETFUND-funded education projects across Nigeria

    NELFUND Interview: Disburses N116b for students’ fees, upkeeps

    NELFUND: No suspension of students’ upkeep allowance

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    Nigeria: Health workers warn of possible strike over unresolved salary adjustment

    Nigeria adopts new frameworks to strengthen accountability, financing, governance, service delivery in health sector

    SUNU Health set to unveil mobile App to ease healthcare access

    Ebola: WHO says 139 suspected dead, numbers expected to rise

    EU to support Ebola response in Africa with €17.5m

    Nigeria: National Assembly plans boost funding for primary healthcare

    SFH lauds NASS reforms on health financing

    Harvard University commends establishment of NASENI-Troment factory to eradicate diseases

    Harvard University commends establishment of NASENI-Troment factory to eradicate diseases

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO says unsafe food causes 866m illnesses, 1.5m deaths annually

    Ebola: WHO says 139 suspected dead, numbers expected to rise

    Africa CDC, WHO inaugurate $518m Ebola response plan

    NCDC calls for structured private sector co-investment to strengthen Nigeria’s health security

    NCDC boss says no confirmed case of Ebola in Nigeria

    Ebola: WHO says 139 suspected dead, numbers expected to rise

    UN scales up Ebola response, refugees ‘exiled’ in Africa

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    TikTok yanks off 4m videos, disrupts 86,000 LIVE sessions in Nigeria

    TikTok yanks off 4m videos, disrupts 86,000 LIVE sessions in Nigeria

    Jeff Duru chairs SUPERNEWS Confab 2026, as Idu Okeahialam delivers keynote paper

    Nigeria’s Digital TV switch begins June 17, says minister Idris

    Nigeria’s Digital TV switch begins June 17, says minister Idris

    Sahara Power Group joins Mission 300 to accelerate electricity access for 300m Africans by 2030

    Oriental News Summit: Kola Adesina to Lead Dialogue on Nigeria’s Oil Industry Decarbonisation

    MEDIA: Digital platforms reshaping consumption

    Report flags Nigeria media funding challenges

    Nigeria: Court sentences man to three years’ imprisonment in Lagos over N8b fraud

    Nigeria: Court stops NBC from punishing broadcasters for expressing opinions

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigerian press bodies urge FG, NASS to act against big tech threat to information sovereignty

    World Press Freedom Day: SERAP, NGE urge government to protect journalists, end insecurity and impunity in Nigeria

    Chief Justice of Nigeria charges judiciary to guard credibility ahead of 2027 polls

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    Nigeria: Senate confirms three nominees as non-career ambassadors, two commissioners of NERC

    Nigeria: Senate issues arrest warrant on Mele Kyari over N210trn audit queries

    NNPCL grows profit by 64% to ₦5.4trn in 2024, as Ojulari pledges strategic investments to sustain growth into next decade

    Ex-NNPCL CFO says no N210trn missing

    NEPZA seeks 10-year tax exemption for SEZ operators

    NEPZA assures investors in Calabar zone of support amid security, tax concerns

    Banks’ Insiders Take Position: Why You Should Worry

    NGX up 0.06% on sustained buying interest

    APC unveils Sonayon-James as Hamzat’s running mate for Lagos 2027

    APC unveils Sonayon-James as Hamzat’s running mate for Lagos 2027

    Nigeria: Regulatory reforms reshape trusteeship, expand fiduciary duties nationwide

    Nigeria: Regulatory reforms reshape trusteeship, expand fiduciary duties nationwide

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    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO says unsafe food causes 866m illnesses, 1.5m deaths annually

    UN launches $33b aid appeal with urgent call for global solidarity

    World Environment Day: UN chief advocates protection of forest, land

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO seeks ban on flavoured tobacco, nicotine products to protect youth

    2026 World No Tobacco Day: Cancer Society seeks strict implementation of Tobacco Control Act

    2026 World No Tobacco Day: Cancer Society seeks strict implementation of Tobacco Control Act

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    World No Tobacco Day 2026: Unmask the appeal – countering tobacco and nicotine addiction – WHO

    Sokoto–Badagry Highway: 18km of earthworks, 47km of site clearance achieved in 2 months- Contractor

    Global economic outlook hangs in balance between geopolitical headwinds and AI boost – WEF

    UN welcomes Strait of Hormuz reopening amid ceasefire

    U.S., Iran trade attacks near Strait of Hormuz amid ceasefire

    Nigeria announces key reforms to boost transparency, accountability in World Bank funded projects

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    Brighton sign 18-year-old Nigerian sensation, Yohanna

    Brighton sign 18-year-old Nigerian sensation, Yohanna

    Liverpool appoint Spaniard Iraola as new boss

    Liverpool appoint Spaniard Iraola as new boss

    World Bicycle Day 2026: BrandEscort reaffirms commitment to promoting a greener future through Cycling Lagos, Cycling Kano

    World Bicycle Day 2026: BrandEscort reaffirms commitment to promoting a greener future through Cycling Lagos, Cycling Kano

    PSG beat Arsenal 4-3 on penalties to win Champions League

    PSG beat Arsenal 4-3 on penalties to win Champions League

    Taxing, Borrowing the Future Without Building: What has Nigeria’s fiscal authority done for the real sector?

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    Saka’s goal sends Arsenal to Champions League final

    Arsenal win Premier League, end 22-year wait for title

    Ecobank Nigeria confirms early repayment of $300m eurobond

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    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

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    Abuja Chamber urges policy stability, MSMEs support to strengthen economy in 2026

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    REA CEO, stakeholders to brainstorm on Nigeria’s energy transition pathway at 2026 Oriental News Conference

    NECA backs 15% import tariff on petrol and diesel

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    Nigeria: Troops, DSS uncover IPOB/ESN arms cache, recover RPG launcher, rifles in Enugu

    Nigeria: Troops, DSS uncover IPOB/ESN arms cache, recover RPG launcher, rifles in Enugu

    Nigeria:  FG launches new revenue system to eliminate leakages, boost transparency

    Nigeria: Presidency disowns ‘Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council’

    AfDB approves $310m financial package for FirstRand Bank to scale up lending to MSMEs, women entrepreneurs, agribusinesses in South Africa

    AfDB commits $86m to agro-processing zones project in Nigeria

    Nigeria: Senate confirms three nominees as non-career ambassadors, two commissioners of NERC

    Nigeria: Senate issues arrest warrant on Mele Kyari over N210trn audit queries

    NNPCL grows profit by 64% to ₦5.4trn in 2024, as Ojulari pledges strategic investments to sustain growth into next decade

    Ex-NNPCL CFO says no N210trn missing

    Nigeria: Services sector leads GDP growth to 3.98% in Q3 2025 

    Nigeria’s external trade strengthens as export earnings drive ₦7.55trn trade surplus in Q1 2026

    Nigeria: Presidency dismisses alleged discrepancies in tax laws as fake

    Nigeria acknowledges IMF assessment, says reforms are strengthening economy

    IMF boss says AI has potential to boost global growth  

    IMF commends Nigeria’s reforms, projects 4.1% growth in 2026

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    NUT  worries over insecurity threatening Nigeria’s education future

  • Entertainment
    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

    Mixed reactions trail Davido’s appointment as youth mobiliser for Adeleke’s re-election campaign

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    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    NFC congratulates Funke Akindele as film ‘Behind The Scenes’ grosses over N2b at the box office

    NFVCB hails Funke Akindele on box office success of ‘Behind The Scene’

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    • LIFE & CULTURE
  • Education
    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    NUT  worries over insecurity threatening Nigeria’s education future

    Nigeria: Minister of Communications, Tijani unveils high-tech innovation hub at OAU

    Nigeria: Minister of Communications, Tijani unveils high-tech innovation hub at OAU

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    2026 National TVET Conference: Nigeria prioritises technical education to boost employment, industrial growth

    WAEC warns against candidate extortion

    UNIPORT appoints Prof. Chike as new VC

    UNIPORT appoints Prof. Chike as new VC

    Nigeria: FG cancels mother tongue policy, declares English sole medium of instruction in schools

    Nigeria: FG reaffirms commitment to advancing Tinubu’s agenda in education  

    UNICEF raises alarm over proliferation of sexualised images of youngsters by AI

    UNICEF says poverty, population surge strain Nigeria’s education system

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    Tinubu commissions TETFUND-funded education projects across Nigeria

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  • Health
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    Nigeria: Health workers warn of possible strike over unresolved salary adjustment

    Nigeria adopts new frameworks to strengthen accountability, financing, governance, service delivery in health sector

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    Ebola: WHO says 139 suspected dead, numbers expected to rise

    EU to support Ebola response in Africa with €17.5m

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    SFH lauds NASS reforms on health financing

    Harvard University commends establishment of NASENI-Troment factory to eradicate diseases

    Harvard University commends establishment of NASENI-Troment factory to eradicate diseases

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO says unsafe food causes 866m illnesses, 1.5m deaths annually

    Ebola: WHO says 139 suspected dead, numbers expected to rise

    Africa CDC, WHO inaugurate $518m Ebola response plan

    NCDC calls for structured private sector co-investment to strengthen Nigeria’s health security

    NCDC boss says no confirmed case of Ebola in Nigeria

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    UN scales up Ebola response, refugees ‘exiled’ in Africa

    • Health and Fitness
  • Media
    TikTok yanks off 4m videos, disrupts 86,000 LIVE sessions in Nigeria

    TikTok yanks off 4m videos, disrupts 86,000 LIVE sessions in Nigeria

    Jeff Duru chairs SUPERNEWS Confab 2026, as Idu Okeahialam delivers keynote paper

    Nigeria’s Digital TV switch begins June 17, says minister Idris

    Nigeria’s Digital TV switch begins June 17, says minister Idris

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    Oriental News Summit: Kola Adesina to Lead Dialogue on Nigeria’s Oil Industry Decarbonisation

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    Report flags Nigeria media funding challenges

    Nigeria: Court sentences man to three years’ imprisonment in Lagos over N8b fraud

    Nigeria: Court stops NBC from punishing broadcasters for expressing opinions

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigerian press bodies urge FG, NASS to act against big tech threat to information sovereignty

    World Press Freedom Day: SERAP, NGE urge government to protect journalists, end insecurity and impunity in Nigeria

    Chief Justice of Nigeria charges judiciary to guard credibility ahead of 2027 polls

    Chief Justice of Nigeria frowns at inaccurate, sensational reporting of court proceedings

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    Nigeria: Senate confirms three nominees as non-career ambassadors, two commissioners of NERC

    Nigeria: Senate issues arrest warrant on Mele Kyari over N210trn audit queries

    NNPCL grows profit by 64% to ₦5.4trn in 2024, as Ojulari pledges strategic investments to sustain growth into next decade

    Ex-NNPCL CFO says no N210trn missing

    NEPZA seeks 10-year tax exemption for SEZ operators

    NEPZA assures investors in Calabar zone of support amid security, tax concerns

    Banks’ Insiders Take Position: Why You Should Worry

    NGX up 0.06% on sustained buying interest

    APC unveils Sonayon-James as Hamzat’s running mate for Lagos 2027

    APC unveils Sonayon-James as Hamzat’s running mate for Lagos 2027

    Nigeria: Regulatory reforms reshape trusteeship, expand fiduciary duties nationwide

    Nigeria: Regulatory reforms reshape trusteeship, expand fiduciary duties nationwide

    • Politics
    • Opinion
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    WHO says unsafe food causes 866m illnesses, 1.5m deaths annually

    UN launches $33b aid appeal with urgent call for global solidarity

    World Environment Day: UN chief advocates protection of forest, land

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO seeks ban on flavoured tobacco, nicotine products to protect youth

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    2026 World No Tobacco Day: Cancer Society seeks strict implementation of Tobacco Control Act

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

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    Brighton sign 18-year-old Nigerian sensation, Yohanna

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    World Bicycle Day 2026: BrandEscort reaffirms commitment to promoting a greener future through Cycling Lagos, Cycling Kano

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  • Business
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    World Bank sanctions 4 Nigerian firms, 52 others for corrupt practices

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Home Opinion

America Borrows Power, Nigeria Borrows Survival

by Blaise Udunze
June 11, 2026
in Opinion
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America Borrows Power, Nigeria Borrows Survival
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By Blaise Udunze

Findings show that the United States owes more than $36 trillion while Nigeria owes over N159.28 trillion, with external debt now standing at approximately $51.8 billion. At a first glance, when comparing the debt profiles of the world’s largest economy and Africa’s largest economy, it may though seem misplaced. America can borrow almost indefinitely because it issues the world’s reserve currency. Nigeria cannot. Yet both countries are confronting a similar worry. This has led to asking, when does debt cease to be a tool for development and become a permanent feature of national survival?

The difference is that while America may be testing the limits of how much debt a superpower can carry, Nigeria is testing how much debt a fragile developing economy can sustain before it begins to mortgage its future.

The latest proposal by the Federal Government to secure another $1.25 billion World Bank facility under the Nigeria Actions for Investment and Jobs Acceleration Programme has once again reignited a debate that refuses to disappear. What appears to be far from the daily lived experience of Nigerians over the years, is having government officials insisting that the loan will support investment, expand access to finance, improve electricity, enhance digital services, and create jobs. According to the claims, these are worthy objectives. But Nigerians have heard similar promises before.

The more important question is no longer whether Nigeria should borrow. Virtually every modern economy borrows. The real question which calls for critical concern, is what exactly Nigeria is borrowing for, and why the benefits of decades of borrowing remain largely invisible in the everyday lives of millions of citizens. This is where the national conversation becomes uncomfortable.

Funny enough over the years, successive governments have justified borrowing as a necessary response to development deficits. Yet despite rising debt levels, many Nigerians struggle to identify corresponding improvements in their lived experiences. This justification has kept many wondering as the roads remain dilapidated, public hospitals are overwhelmed, electricity supply also remains unreliable. Talk of the public education system, this has continued to deteriorate badly and unemployment remains stubbornly high. Inflation has eroded incomes with the cost of cooking gas hitting N2,400 per kg, while businesses struggle under the weight of high operating costs.

If borrowing is supposed to finance development, where is the development? The concern becomes even more urgent when and highly alarming when viewed against the backdrop of Nigeria’s worsening fiscal position. According to the Debt Management Office, public debt has climbed to over N159 trillion. With this outrageous figure, more troubling is the fact that debt servicing now consumes an alarming share of government revenue, which has continued to cripple economic growth and compromising the future. This development caught the attention of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group as it recently noted that Nigeria’s debt-service-to-revenue ratio remains among the highest in the world. In simple and practical terms, this implies that government is spending an increasingly large portion of what it earns paying creditors rather than investing in infrastructure, healthcare, education, security, or economic expansion.

This is the hallmark of a debt trap. The danger is not necessarily that Nigeria will default tomorrow. The danger is that the nation becomes trapped in a vicious cycle where governments borrow to finance deficits, then borrow again to service existing obligations, and then borrow even more to cover the consequences of previous borrowing. That cycle is already becoming visible.

Come to think of it, President Bola Tinubu’s administration has boldly defended borrowing as necessary to support reforms, cushion economic shocks, and stimulate growth. Yet critics have continued to point to the fact that since May 2023, borrowing has accelerated significantly.

According to economic analyst Dele Oye, the current administration has added approximately N65.9 trillion to Nigeria’s debt stock within just two years, a figure that exceeds several multiples of what Nigeria accumulated during its first five decades after independence.

Whether one agrees with the politics surrounding that claim is secondary. The underlying concern remains valid since debt is growing far faster than the visible capacity of the economy to generate sustainable revenue. This is why comparisons with the United States are useful.

America’s debt is enormous, but debt sustainability is not determined by the size of debt alone. It is determined by economic productivity. The United States supports its debt burden through a diversified economy, deep capital markets, technological innovation, globally competitive corporations, advanced research institutions, and an unmatched ability to attract global investment.

Debt is not what sustains America. Productivity does. Unlike Nigeria and by contrast, it continues to rely heavily on crude oil revenues, a narrow tax base, volatile foreign exchange earnings, and a fragile manufacturing sector. The critical difference is that every dollar borrowed by Nigeria therefore carries greater risks than every dollar borrowed by the United States.

When America borrows, it borrows largely in its own currency. When Nigeria borrows externally, it exposes itself to exchange-rate risks that can dramatically increase repayment costs whenever the naira weakens as this call for utmost caution. Every currency depreciation effectively inflates the burden of external obligations. What appears manageable today can become overwhelming tomorrow. This reality makes Nigeria’s current debt trajectory particularly concerning which is but the truth.

The World Bank itself has raised concerns about governance risks and structural weaknesses within Nigeria’s fiscal architecture. Even more troubling are recent revelations indicating that more than N34.5 trillion was reportedly deducted through pre-distribution mechanisms before revenues reached the Federation Account between 2023 and 2025. According to the findings, approximately 41 percent of government revenues were removed as first-line charges before distribution.

Whichever way it is viewed, perhaps as fiscal leakages, weak oversight, or institutional inefficiency, the implications are profound and of critical concern. If we must begin to tell ourselves the factual truth, a nation cannot continue borrowing aggressively while simultaneously failing to maximise the value of revenues it already generates.

This brings us to the central question confronting Nigeria today. The point is, are these loans building future productive capacity, or are they merely financing continuity?

Borrowing can be justified when it funds projects that expand economic output. Investments in power generation, transport infrastructure, agriculture, industrialisation, technology, and education can create long-term growth that eventually pays for the debt itself. In such cases, debt becomes a bridge to prosperity.

But it must be known that borrowing to fund recurrent expenditure, sustain bloated government structures, finance consumption, cover inefficiencies, or service previous debts transforms borrowing into a treadmill. The irony here is that the country runs harder every year but remains trapped in the same place. Unfortunately, much of Nigeria’s fiscal reality increasingly resembles the latter.

The tragedy is that this debt burden is not abstract. It is already affecting ordinary Nigerians. The adverse implication and critical point are that every naira directed toward debt servicing is a naira unavailable for schools, hospitals, security, electricity, or social protection. Every external loan increases future repayment obligations. Every missed opportunity to invest borrowed funds productively transfers today’s policy failures to future generations.

The consequences are visible everywhere. Businesses face prohibitively high borrowing costs. Today in Nigeria, it is no longer news that manufacturers struggle with energy expenses, which rob off adversely on the citizens. The same applies to youth unemployment, which remains widespread. Also, infrastructure deficits persist. Another, critical issue is that states remain heavily dependent on monthly allocations from federal level. With the developments, economic growth remains too weak to significantly improve living standards.

The result is a contradictory in which debt rises while prosperity stagnates. This is perhaps the greatest lesson Nigeria must learn from America’s debt experience.

The debate should not focus exclusively on how much debt a nation carries. The more important progressive question is whether the economy is productive enough to sustain that debt.

What every Nigerians should know is that Nigeria as a country cannot borrow its way to prosperity because it must first strengthen the foundations that generate sustainable growth. With the lingering challenging surrounding the borrowing and the mountain of debts, one key fact is that it cannot rely indefinitely on external creditors while neglecting domestic productivity. Also, it cannot continue to depend on oil revenues while failing to broaden its tax base. Another loosed end that has been a critical matter is that it cannot expect debt-financed development without strong institutions, transparency, accountability and effective project execution.

The solutions are neither mysterious nor impossible. This entails that Nigeria must aggressively expand domestic revenue mobilisation without suffocating businesses and ensure it must digitise tax administration, eliminate leakages, enforce fiscal responsibility laws. Also, it must reduce the cost of governance, strengthen public procurement systems while it ensures that every borrowed naira and kobo is linked to measurable economic outcomes.

Equally important, government must rebuild public trust. The truth is that citizens are more willing to support reforms when they can see tangible results. Some of the developments in the past that have continued to erode public trust are when subsidy savings are announced, people expect better roads, improved healthcare, reliable electricity, and enhanced security. When new loans are obtained, they expect visible projects and measurable returns but the reverse have been the case. Those at the helms of affairs of this country must understand that transparency is not merely good governance; it is an economic necessity. History offers a warning.

In 2006, under the leadership of Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria celebrated its exit from the Paris Club debt burden after securing one of Africa’s most significant debt relief achievements. Not too long but for a brief period, the country stood relatively free from the crushing obligations that had constrained development for decades. Two decades later, that achievement appears increasingly distant.

The danger is not simply that Nigeria is borrowing. The danger is that borrowing is becoming normalised as a substitute for difficult reforms.

A nation can borrow to build industries or borrow to pay bills. It can borrow to create future wealth or borrow to postpone present challenges. One path expands prosperity; the other compounds dependency.

America’s debt mountain demonstrates that even wealthy nations are not immune from the consequences of structural borrowing. Nigeria’s debt burden demonstrates how much more dangerous that reality becomes when economic productivity fails to keep pace. Borrowing can buy time. It cannot buy prosperity.

Sooner or later, every nation must generate the economic value necessary to justify the debts it accumulates. Nigeria’s future will depend not on how much it can borrow, but on how effectively it can produce, innovate, industrialise, and grow.

That is the lesson hidden underneath America’s debt mountain. It is also the lesson Nigeria ignores at its own peril.

Blaise, a journalist and PR professional, writes from Lagos and can be reached via: blaise.udunze@gmail.com

Tags: Nigeria
Blaise Udunze

Blaise Udunze

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