Home BUSINESS BANKING & FINANCE President Buhari Eying $30 Billion Foreign Loan To Fund Infrastructure

President Buhari Eying $30 Billion Foreign Loan To Fund Infrastructure

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President Muhammadu Buhari has asked the National Assembly to approve plans to borrow $30 billion abroad to fund infrastructure plans until 2018.

According to a letter from the President, which was read out on Tuesday in the assembly, the borrowing plans included the sale of Eurobonds worth $4.5 billion and a planned budget support of $3.5 billion, according to the letter from Buhari.

“The projects cut across all sectors with special emphasis on infrastructure, agriculture, health, education, water supply, growth and employment generation, poverty reduction,” said the letter read out in both chambers by Senate President Bukola araki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

“It has become necessary to resort to prudent external borrowing to bridge the financing gap,” Buhari said in the letter. The borrowing was for the period until 2018, he added.

Nigeria, an OPEC member, slipped into recession for the first time in more than 20 years in the second quarter largely due to low global oil prices. Crude oil sales account for about two-thirds of government revenue.

Meanwhile the President had since sent a draft budget for 2017 to parliament for approval, detailing plans to spend a record 6.866 trillion naira ($22.55 billion) aimed at pulling Africa’s biggest economy out of recession.

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The planned spending is up from this year’s 6.06 trillion naira budget and seeks to stimulate growth by funding infrastructure development to increase manufacturing, create jobs and reduce costly imports.

The government has held talks for months with the World Bank, China and other institutions to fund a 2016 budget deficit of 2.2 trillion naira but so far only the African Development Bank has publicly confirmed a planned loan of $1 billion.

Nigeria also wants to sell $1 billion in Eurobonds by the end of the year although as of Friday no bank to arrange the issue had been appointed yet.

Problems related to oil prices have been exacerbated by militant attacks on energy facilities that have cut crude production, which was 2.1 million barrels per day (bpd) at the start of 2016, by 700,000 bpd.

Output had improved to 1.9 million bpd, the petroleum ministry said in a tweet late on Monday, without giving details. [myad]

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