The
current budget row and the possibility of debt default by the United
States portend serious danger for Nigeria as the country’s cost of
borrowing from the international financial market will likely rise
significantly, the Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has said.
She said this while addressing a world
press conference on the outcome of the meeting of the Commonwealth
Finance Ministers with the leadership of the World Bank and IMF in
Washington DC, United States, on Thursday.
Okonjo-Iweala said the crisis in the US
would not be favourable to yield and interests accruable on two of the
nation’s sovereign debt instruments currently being traded in major
financial centres across the globe.
According to her, the stalemate will make it more expensive for the country to borrow from the international financial market.
Nigeria had earlier this year issued a $1bn Eurobond that was heavily subscribed by international investors.
That came two years after the Federal Government had sold its first $500m bond in the international financial market.
Okonjo-Iweala, however, said the current
debt row between the US Congress and the President Barack Obama
administration was creating a lot of uncertainty in the global financial
market, adding that it might affect the performance of Nigeria’s bond
if not resolved urgently.
“The present situation in the US creates
a lot of uncertainty for developing countries, especially those that
have bonds traded in the US market. We hope it is resolved urgently so
that it will not hurt the yields and interests on these instruments,”
she said.
On the efforts of The Commonwealth to
encourage member countries to raise more funds for development
internally through taxation, Okonjo-Iweala said the issue of tax evasion
by multinationals and local entities had now been brought to the
forefront of discussions.
She said before now, the focus had been
on corruption in developing countries, but it had now been accepted that
tax evasion had become a big problem.
The minister said that an initiative had
been set up under the G-8 headed by the Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom to look at financial centres and the issue of tax evasion by
companies.
Similarly, she said the African finance
ministers had set up a high powered panel chaired by the former South
African President, Thabo Mbeki, to look at the issues of tax evasion and
illicit financial flows and their impact on the economies of member
states.
“This is work in progress and we are
trying to look at what we can do; the extent of this problem and exactly
what steps we can take to solve the problem,” she said.
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