The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has assessed Nigeria’s economic
situation and submitted that the country would channel more than half of its
revenue into servicing debt in 2026.
The development reveals the persistent pressure of debt obligations on the
country’s public finances despite signs of improving macroeconomic stability.
The IMF projected that the Federal Government’s interest payments will
account for 53.7 per cent of total revenue in 2026, slightly higher than the 53.2
per cent estimated for 2025 and significantly above the 40.8 per cent recorded in
2024.
The Fund, however, expects a marginal improvement in 2027, when the
interest-to-revenue ratio is projected to decline to 52.4 per cent.
The forecast was contained in the IMF’s latest country assessment, which also
pointed to improvements in inflation, foreign reserves and overall economic
stability following recent reforms.
According to the report, average inflation is expected to ease to 16 per cent in
2026, while Nigeria’s gross international reserves are projected to rise from
$40.2 billion in 2024 to $58.1 billion in 2026 before increasing further to $62
billion in 2027.
The projections come amid ongoing efforts by the Federal Government to
strengthen public finances, boost revenue generation and sustain economic
reforms aimed at restoring investor confidence.
Speaking in an interview with ARISE TV, IMF Resident Representative for
Nigeria, Christian Ebeke, said the country’s debt remained sustainable despite
concerns over the rising cost of servicing it. “Our latest assessment in the
Article IV that we just published on June 9 basically concludes that Nigeria’s
debt is sustainable. And second, the risk of sovereign stress is actually
moderate. So we don’t see Nigeria as a high-risk debt-distressed country,”
Ebeke said.
He noted that Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio, which remains in the mid-30 per
cent range, compares favourably with many peer economies and reflects a
relatively manageable debt burden.

According to him, the structure of Nigeria’s debt portfolio also provides some
comfort, as it consists of a balanced mix of domestic and external borrowings
with relatively long repayment maturities.
However, Ebeke stressed that the major challenge facing the country is not the
size of its debt stock but the proportion of government revenue being consumed
by debt servicing. “We actually estimate that in 2025 to 2028, the interest-to-
revenue ratio, how much the federal government pays out of the tax it collects,
is actually about 50 per cent,” he said.
“When you have more than 50 per cent of your tax collection devoted to
repaying interest on your federal government debt, it leaves you very little room
to actually pay for health, education, cash transfer, including security.”

The IMF official said the institution’s focus remains on supporting Nigeria’s
efforts to improve domestic revenue mobilisation, describing it as the most
effective way to reduce fiscal pressures and create room for critical public
spending.

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