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IMPI Accuses Ndume Of Misrepresenting Facts

by Leadership News
5 months ago
in News
IMPI
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The Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI) has described former Senate Chief Whip Mohammed Ndume’s stance on World Bank loans secured by the Bola Tinubu administration as a deliberate misrepresentation of facts.

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In a policy statement signed by its Chairman, Dr Omoniyi Akinsiju, the think tank argued that Senator Ndume’s criticism showed a narrow understanding of the multifaceted nature of development.

It said: “Our analysis shows that World Bank loans accounted for nearly 80% of Nigeria’s multilateral debt in 2024, rising modestly from $21.15 billion in 2023 to $22.32 billion in 2024—a 5.5% increase, not the $9.5 billion figure Senator Ndume cited.

“Meanwhile, Nigeria’s IMF debt fell sharply from $2.47 billion to $800.23 million (-67.6%) over the same period. This evidence supports the view that the Tinubu administration is not carelessly accumulating debt but carefully balancing securing new credit for critical sectors and reducing overall public debt.

“The administration should be recognised for prudent debt management and reform focus, not unfairly disparaged.

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“Additionally, Senator Ndume’s claim that these loans bypassed parliamentary scrutiny is inaccurate. The World Bank credit approval process requires approval by its internal arms (IDA or IBRD) and subsequent concurrence by Nigeria’s National Assembly before disbursement.

“For the record, the World Bank approved six projects (valued at $4.25 billion) for Nigeria in 2024, but actual disbursements between 2023 and 2024 stand at just $2.36 billion—far from the $9.5 billion claimed.

“Beyond this, we find it somewhat disconcerting that the Senator made efforts in that interview to misrepresent and, as it were, politicise the value of the debt secured by the Tinubu administration from the World Bank, putting it at $9.5 billion since the administration’s inception in June 2023.

“This is inappropriate, as such propagation of deliberately concocted misleading figures against a government with the apparent purpose of disparaging it and, in the same token, inciting the people against the government should be discouraged.

“Nigeria’s debt profile is a loud testimony of a government that is not about the acquisition of debt but one that is adept at managing its debt portfolio by creating a positively skewed balance between new loans and paying down older ones.

“Thus, rather than impugn the capacity and the good standing of the government’s debt management approach, we submit that the Tinubu administration should be seen for what it is: a genuinely reform-focused administration.”

The policy group also wondered how a ranking Senator would describe World Bank loans meant for human capital development as non-tangible, ambiguous, and with little impact on the people.

“This criticism is shortsighted, betraying a narrow understanding of the multifaceted nature of development. Development today is not limited to physical infrastructure alone but increasingly encompasses human capital—skills, knowledge, education, and health—that underpin a productive society and stronger economy.

“Countries like India and China have surged by building roads or factories and investing in their people. Human capital development—expanding access to education, healthcare, social protections, gender inclusion, and agricultural productivity—drives lasting national prosperity.

“Senator Ndume’s suggestion that only physical projects matter is not supported by development economics or Nigeria’s need for inclusive growth. Notably, the loans are not commercial bank advances but concessionary, development-backed loans from institutions like the World Bank—often with very low interest rates, extended maturities (up to 40 years), and multi-year moratoria. Such terms make these loans an efficient and responsible instrument for funding national development priorities that commercial lenders will not touch.

“India and China, for instance, developed their technical capacity deliberately and strategically, understanding that human skills and knowledge would be their ultimate competitive trade advantage.

“The soft and intangible projects funded by the federal government are as important as the “tangible, accountable” projects preferred by Senator Ndume.

“Of course, we are sure that the Senator is conscious that those loans for intangibles that he mentioned are not commercially valued loans like those made available by commercial banks. Indeed, development-backed loans are classified as concessionary loans with usually long tenures, as long as 40 years, and interest rates as low as one per cent, sometimes with a four-year moratorium.

“Naturally, no commercial bank is inclined to fund these aspects of human development because they have no basis for physical and commercial quantification. However, they constitute a significant pivot in human growth and sustainability. Realising the critical need to invest in human capital, multilateral agencies emerged to fill the fiscal gaps and address and facilitate investments focused on human capital development.

“The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) lead entities in this sector. The World Bank seeks to help countries invest in and develop their people to be productive citizens and active economic contributors. The philosophical underpinning of the World Bank’s operations is prioritising investments in education, healthcare, and social protections to realise a stronger economy full of healthy, thriving adults. This forms the kernel of the World Bank loans to Nigeria,” IMPI explained.

After analysing World Bank data on Nigeria’s loans over the last twenty-two months, the group was emphatic that the fourth-term senator did not have enough facts on the country’s debt profile.

“With public concerns already heightened around government borrowings, it was incumbent on a senior legislator such as Senator Ndume to provide accurate and holistic information—especially when Nigeria’s total public debt, while rising to N144.67 trillion in local currency, actually declined in dollar terms from $108.23 billion at the end of December 2023 to $94.23 billion by December 2024.

“This signals a remarkable reduction of $14 billion within a year—an unprecedented fiscal achievement since 2006 that deserves acknowledgement, not a misrepresentation.”

The policy group also urged people in positions of authority to prioritise accuracy and transparency in their public engagements rather than playing to the gallery.

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