For many Nigerians, the country’s debt crisis often feels distant, hidden behind economic jargon, government borrowing figures, and fiscal reports.
But beneath the statistics lies a growing reality that increasingly shapes everyday life: rising debt pressures continue to threaten economic stability, public spending, and long-term growth.
That warning has now been reinforced by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), which says Nigeria’s public finance situation remains fragile despite signs that some debt indicators temporarily improved in 2024.
In its latest debt monitoring report, the policy advocacy group warned that the country is still operating within what it described as a “high-stress” debt environment, with deeper structural weaknesses continuing to undermine fiscal sustainability.
At first glance, the numbers appear encouraging.
Nigeria’s Debt Burden Index (DBI), a metric designed to measure fiscal stress more realistically than conventional debt indicators, declined to 70.9 points in 2024 from a record 83.6 points in 2023.
Ordinarily, such a decline could suggest that debt pressures are easing.
But according to the NESG, the apparent improvement masks a more troubling reality.
The organisation explained that the reduction was driven largely by temporary moderation in debt servicing pressures rather than any meaningful strengthening of government revenues or fiscal fundamentals.
Meanwhile, Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio continued climbing sharply, rising to 40.6 per cent in 2024 as the government maintained heavy reliance on borrowing to finance widening fiscal deficits.
The contradiction, the NESG said, exposes the weakness beneath the headline figures.
“The underlying fiscal vulnerability remained significant,” the report noted.
In practical terms, the country may appear more stable on paper, but the structural problems driving debt accumulation remain largely unresolved.
The report further warned that debt pressures are expected to intensify again throughout 2025.
According to NESG projections, the Debt Burden Index could rise to 78.4 points in the first quarter of 2025 before peaking at 79.6 points in the second quarter.
Although slightly lower pressure is expected in the third quarter, the index is projected to climb again toward the end of the year.
Rather than showing a path toward debt sustainability, the pattern suggests Nigeria remains trapped within a cycle of persistent fiscal stress.
For economic analysts, the concern goes beyond debt numbers themselves.
High debt pressure affects government capacity to invest in critical sectors such as infrastructure, healthcare, education, power, and social protection. As more public revenue is diverted toward debt servicing, less funding remains available for productive economic development.
The situation also increases pressure on taxation, inflation management, exchange rate stability, and investor confidence.
The NESG warned that improvements in headline debt indicators should not create a false sense of comfort, stressing that Nigeria’s fiscal system is still struggling with weak revenue mobilisation, rising expenditure pressures, and heavy dependence on borrowing.
The group has repeatedly advocated stronger fiscal reforms, improved revenue generation, prudent debt management, and deeper structural adjustments aimed at reducing long-term pressure on public finances.
For now, however, the report suggests Nigeria’s debt challenge is far from over.
Behind the appearance of stability, the country’s fiscal foundation may still be carrying more pressure than the numbers initially reveal.






