PwC’s
economists, in a new report published on Wednesday, said this financing
hole could widen to about $10 billion in the event of a re-emergence of
Iran oil production in the second quarter of the year as price is
expected to hit a low point of $35 per barrel, slowly recovering to an
average of $45 per barrel.
The firm's report says a
significant debt issuance and cuts to recurrent expenditure would be
needed, adding that state governments could struggle to borrow from the
financial markets to pay their workers.
According to the report, some highly-indebted states may miss planned interest payments on their debts.
If
oil production falls by 15 per cent through bunkering and other supply
disruptions, gross oil revenues will fall to a third of the 2013 level
(about $43bn), it stated.
The report adds:
"Combined
with difficulties of administering tax collection from unstable parts
of the country, we would expect the Federal Government to fall over
three months behind on paying employee wages and government bond yields
on US dollar-debt could approach 20 per cent."
They
said that they expected that if the oil price continued to stabilise,
the Central Bank of Nigeria’s recent adjustment of the exchange rate
regime would be sufficient to ease pressure on the naira this year.
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