External Debt Servicing, External Reserves and Economic Growth in Nigeria
Abstract
The study examined the relationship between External Debt Servicing, External Reserves and Economic Growth in Nigeria. The study adopted Ex-post facto research design. Secondary data was used in the study, and empirical investigation was carried out on the sample size covering the period of 15 years (2008-2022) and real GDP was used as an indicator of economic growth, while external debt service payment and external debt stock were also used as indicator of public borrowing. The study employed multiple regression analysis using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS 26) to examine the relationships between the dependent and independent variables. Finding indicated that there is no significant relationship between external debt stocks and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Nigeria; there is no significant relationship between external debt service payment and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Nigeria; there is no significant relationship between External reserves to debt ratio and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Nigeria and there is no significant relationship between debt services to revenue ratio and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Nigeria. It was recommended that Nigeria’s foreign loans should be ventured into capital projects that will improve the economy, by fighting corruption, adopting better and flexible strategies of trade and exchange rate (monetary) policies and that foreign borrowings for capital expansion and investment must be balanced against the interest cost and sustainability effects of the debt.
Keywords
External Debt Servicing
External Reserves and Economic Growth
How to Cite
Yeipyeng, Y. J., & Majiyebo, K. V. (2025). External Debt Servicing, External Reserves and Economic Growth in Nigeria. Nigerian Accounting Horizon Journal, 10(2), 211-220.
Y. J. Yeipyeng, and K. V. Majiyebo, "External Debt Servicing, External Reserves and Economic Growth in Nigeria," Nigerian Accounting Horizon Journal, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 211-220, December 2025.