National Economy
Thursday, September 4, 2025
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Energy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Money Guide
    • Analysis
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy
No Result
View All Result
Read News
National Economy
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Energy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Money Guide
    • Analysis
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy
No Result
View All Result
National Economy
No Result
View All Result
Home Lead-In

States With Highest Domestic Debts

by Adekunle Munir
3 years ago
in Lead-In
Reading Time: 2 mins read
States
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Telegram

Contrary to popular perception among Nigerians that Nigeria’s N103 trillion debt is owed by the federal government only, Lagos, Delta and Ogun, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Bayelsa and a few others are highly indebted and contribute in no small amount to Nigeria’s debt burden.

As the NNPC Limited has failed to remit to the federal government to fund the FAAC, states have resorted to borrowing more to fund their operations. Hence, states’ debt have increased in recent months.

According to the Debt Management Office (DMO), many states have borrowed more between the first and second quarters of the year 2022. In March, the 36 States and the Federal Capital Territory had a domestic debt of N4,842,838,992,386.22. However, this has risen to N5,281,277,033,703.91 as at the end of June.

As of the time under review, Lagos State borrowed a total of N797,305,312,602.53. This shows that the debt profile of Lagos has increased from the N780,476,880,563.06 it was in March 31, 2022.

You May Like

FG Inaugurates Advisory Committee On National Building Code

NDPC Gives Banks, Insurers 21 Days For Data Audit

Also, the debt stock of Delta State skyrocketed within the three months period. From N163,478,454,259.54 in March this year, Governor Ifeanyi Okowa’s administration has increased the domestic debt of Delta to N378,878,236,830.76. That is more than 100 percent increase from March to June this year.

Ogun on the other hand is owing a total of N241,782,021,304.96. Though it stands among the top three most indebted States, Ogun debt figure has marginally reduced from the N241,979,216,147.55 it was in March.

A document released by the Debt Management Office indicates that Rivers is the fourth with a debt stock of N225,505,011,356.55.

Imo State, with a domestic debt of N210,394,836,519.93, is the fifth. The State has borrowed more as the DMO report shows that the debt figure of Imo was N204,612,397,430.39 in March.

Akwa Ibom is sixth on the list, having borrowed a total of N203,951,611,822.07. This is a slight increase from the N203,112,373,546.77 it had in the first quarter of the year.

It was gathered that Cross River has a debt profile of N176,086,197,586; Oyo has borrowed N159,906,877,910; Osun and Bayelsa are owing N150billion each, while Plateau and Benue State owe N144.60billion and N143.54billion, respectively, as of the time under review.

In the same vein, Bauchi has borrowed up to N129billion; Kano, N125 billion; Gombe, N123.6billion; Adamawa, N120.6billion; Ekiti, N119.5billion; Zamfara, N115.7billion; Edo, N112.1billion; Kwara, N110.5billion; Abia, N107.6billion and Borno, N102.4billion.

Also, Yobe State has over N96.6billion as its domestic debt profile; Taraba, N90.8billion; Kogi has N90.5billion; Sokoto has N89.9billion; Enugu, N89.9billion; Niger, N80.9billion; Kaduna, N78.1billion; FCT has N75.7billion; Nasarawa, N72.9billion and Anambra, N72.4billion.

Jigawa is the state with the lowest debt profile having borrowed a sum of N45,135,377,621.30. However, the debt profile of Jigawa also rose with over N3billion between March and June 2022. As of March, Jigawa’s domestic debt was N41,629,971,249.71.

Jigawa is followed by Ebonyi with N59.1billion; Kebbi, N60.4billion; Ondo with N62.2billion and Katsina with N66.6billion.

Meanwhile, many Nigerians have continued to seek explanations about the modes of borrowing these loans, the repayment plans and the purpose for which the monies are borrowed.

ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Understanding Non-Interest Finance

Next Post

N10.5trn Budget Deficit; FG To Borrow N48k On Behalf Of Each Nigerian Next Year

ANOTHER GOOD READ

FG Inaugurates Advisory Committee On National Building Code
Lead-In

FG Inaugurates Advisory Committee On National Building Code

3 days ago
NDPC Gives Banks, Insurers 21 Days For Data Audit
Lead-In

NDPC Gives Banks, Insurers 21 Days For Data Audit

3 days ago
US Plans 4-year Cap On Student Visas, 240 Days For Journalists
Lead-In

US Plans 4-year Cap On Student Visas, 240 Days For Journalists

3 days ago
GIZ, EU Back Small Claims Courts To Support Nigeria’s MSMEs
Lead-In

GIZ, EU Back Small Claims Courts To Support Nigeria’s MSMEs

3 days ago
17m Air Travellers , 174,000 Tonnes Of Cargo Face Disruption
Cover

17m Air Travellers , 174,000 Tonnes Of Cargo Face Disruption

3 days ago
FG Threatens Oil Licence Revocation As Output Hits 1.8m
Lead-In

FG Threatens Oil Licence Revocation As Output Hits 1.8m

1 week ago
Next Post
cover new

N10.5trn Budget Deficit; FG To Borrow N48k On Behalf Of Each Nigerian Next Year

Most Recent

IFC Warns Africa Risks Missing AI Boom Without Action

IFC Warns Africa Risks Missing AI Boom Without Action

September 4, 2025

FCTA Revokes All Park Licenses In Abuja For Review

September 4, 2025
Federal Gov’t Approves ₦142bn For Bus Terminals In 6 Geopolitical Zones

FG Digitises Basic Health Care Fund To Curb Leakages

September 4, 2025
Imperative Of Peace For Nigeria’s Economic Growth

Nigeria, Big Tech In Talks On Hyperscale Data Centres

September 4, 2025
FCT, Lagos, Rivers Generate 70% Of Air Transport GDP

EFCC Seeks Tighter Airport Surveillance Over Illicit Financial Flows

September 4, 2025
Federal Gov’t Achieves Oil Revenue Target, Attributes Feat To Military, PINL

Over 2.6m Nigerians Register For Voter Cards In 2 Weeks’

September 4, 2025

SEC Unveils New Website For Transparency, Investor Protection

September 2, 2025
Federal Gov’t Approves ₦142bn For Bus Terminals In 6 Geopolitical Zones

FG Targets 44m Nigerians On Health Insurance 2030

September 2, 2025
Advertise with us

© 2024 | National Economy

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Energy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Money Guide
    • Analysis
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy

© 2024 | National Economy