The African Democratic Congress has knocked the Federal Government over Nigeria’s rising debt profile, accusing the administration of President Bola Tinubu of running what it described as a “Ponzi economy” sustained by continuous borrowing.
ADC reaction followed the Federal Government’s move to seek an additional $1.25bn loan from the World Bank, weeks after the National Assembly approved fresh external borrowing requests running into billions of dollars.
In a statement issued on Thursday by its National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, the ADC said the country’s debt burden had become disturbing, warning that the growing dependence on loans was worsening economic hardship for ordinary Nigerians.
According to him, Nigeria’s total public debt has climbed to about N159.28tn, while inflation, unemployment, insecurity and cost of living continue to rise across the country.
Abdullahi said, “At this point, Nigerians must ask a simple question: if this government keeps borrowing trillions of naira every few months, why are Nigerians getting poorer, and why is life getting harder for the majority?
“Today, food prices continue to rise daily, electricity tariffs are increasing, the naira remains weak, businesses are shutting down, insecurity is spreading, and millions of young Nigerians remain unemployed.
“This is why the ADC says the Tinubu administration is running a Ponzi economy, where new loans are constantly being taken to service old debts and cover fiscal failures, while ordinary Nigerians are left to carry the burden.”
The party also expressed concern over the growing cost of debt servicing, noting that President Tinubu had projected that Nigeria would spend about $11.6bn, estimated at over N15tn, on debt servicing in 2026 alone.
“In simple terms, trillions of naira that should have gone into roads, hospitals, schools, electricity, security, agriculture and job creation will instead go into paying creditors and servicing old loans,” the statement added.
The opposition party further alleged that the government is failing to translate borrowings into visible improvements in the lives of citizens.
“A serious government borrows to build industries, stabilise power, create jobs, expand exports, improve transportation and grow the economy in ways that citizens can actually feel.
“But after all this borrowing, Nigerians cannot point to any measurable improvement in their daily lives that matches the scale of the debt being accumulated in their name,” the statement read in part.
The party also criticized the National Assembly for what it described as its failure to subject borrowing requests to rigorous scrutiny.
“The National Assembly, which should serve as checks on executive excesses, has been reduced to a mere rubber stamp, approving massive borrowing requests with little resistance or serious public scrutiny,” the statement said.