Borrowing in itself is not the real problem. Nations across the world borrow money to develop infrastructure, strengthen institutions, expand industries, improve healthcare, support education, and stimulate economic growth. When properly managed, borrowing can become a tool for national development and long-term prosperity.
The real issue is accountability, transparency, and results.
A country can borrow heavily and still make visible progress if the funds are invested wisely in projects that directly improve the lives of citizens. Roads, electricity, healthcare systems, security, job creation, transportation, agriculture, and industrial development are areas where responsible borrowing can produce meaningful change.
What continues to frustrate many Nigerians, however, is that despite constant borrowing, the suffering of ordinary citizens keeps increasing. Poverty deepens, unemployment rises, insecurity spreads, inflation worsens, and public infrastructure remains weak in many parts of the country.
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Naturally, people begin to ask difficult questions:
Where is the borrowed money going?
Why are roads, electricity, healthcare, education, and security still major national challenges?
Why is public debt increasing while living conditions continue to deteriorate?
These are legitimate concerns, not acts of hostility against government.
Comparing Nigeria to countries that borrowed successfully without considering differences in governance, accountability, transparency, and corruption misses the real point. Many developed nations borrowed money to build productive economies, expand industries, improve public services, and create sustainable systems that benefited their citizens.
In Nigeria, however, many citizens believe borrowed funds often disappear into corruption, political patronage, wasteful spending, inflated contracts, and abandoned projects with little or no impact on the lives of ordinary people.
Citizens have every right to question government borrowing because repayment will ultimately come from public resources, taxes, and future generations. Demanding accountability is not sentiment or negativity; it is part of responsible civic engagement and democratic participation.
What makes the situation even more painful is when leaders ask citizens to endure hardship and make sacrifices while there is a widespread perception of wasteful spending, luxury in government, and lack of transparency in public finance management. That contradiction fuels public anger, frustration, and distrust.
No nation can continue borrowing endlessly without ensuring that the people feel the impact through visible development and improved living conditions.
Nigeria does not only need more loans; it needs responsible leadership, transparent governance, prudent management of public resources, and policies that genuinely improve the lives of citizens. Development must be measurable, inclusive, and visible to the people whose future is tied to these debts.
At the heart of every borrowing decision should be one simple question: will this debt improve the lives of ordinary Nigerians or merely increase the burden on future generations?
Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM



















