Nigeria is holding talks with the World Bank to help it fund a forecast $11bn (£7.7bn) budget deficit.
However, Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun said in a statement that it was not applying for an "emergency loan".
Nigeria is believed to be looking for around $3.5bn from the World Bank and the African Development Bank.
Africa's largest economy has been hit hard by the recent fall in oil prices, and the government needs to find new sources of income to fund its budget.
Last year's government budget was largely financed by oil revenue.
Ms Adeosun said that "Nigeria, as a member of World Bank group is entitled to access available funds like every member-country," but she is also looking at the domestic market as a means to get finance.
"No application for loans have been made. We are simply discussing options for funding [the] 2016 budget," she added.
Analysis: Lerato Mbele, BBC Africa Business Report
A major concern for Nigeria is that more than 55 years after independence, oil revenues are still being used to support the day-to-day activities of the government, rather than being used for investment.
President Muhammadu Buhari is trying to adjust the public finances and whether he achieves this will be one of the ways his term in office will be judged.
For now, the government will continue its consultations with the international partners, which started earlier this year with a visit by International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde.
By their assessments, Nigeria's economy will slow down in 2016 but growth may still come in at 3.2%, which is a positive in the face of global volatility.
So, in effect whilst the situation in Nigeria is clearly serious, some would say Nigeria is not yet in a crisis mode.
Because of that, nobody is using the word bailout which would suggest that the country is almost bankrupt.
Chief Africa economist for Standard Chartered bank Razia Khan told the BBC that going to the World Bank could be attractive as it may offer Nigeria better terms for a loan than it would get from the international money markets.
Nigeria is deliberately boosting spending on infrastructure development to try to boost the economy as it tries to deal with the oil price shock, she added.
The country is also under pressure to devalue the currency, the naira, as it tries to cope with the impact of the declining oil price.
BBC reportage.
Loan again? I hope Nigeria's doom is not looming
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End time loan
ReplyDeleteEnd time loan to bad
DeleteWhich loan. you want to put people under heavy bondage again. APC na wa for una oo
ReplyDeleteAll the abacha loots and other loots is it not enough to get started?
Nigeria.....
ReplyDeleteEvery body should go back to their root and that is Agriculture. The oil should better finish let mw know whwre they can be looting from. Ndi oshi.
ReplyDeleteHell no please Buhari
ReplyDeleteAnother SAP Should Not Repeat Itself. Iye
ReplyDeleteNow we understand why these APC moffoons started shouting "the treasury is empty" the second they took over, and all the noise they have been making. All of it has been leading to this.... They are mortgaging Nigeria and her future. CHANGE GGGG KOBO KOBO.
ReplyDeleteNaija, una see una sef?
Serves you all right. Your suffering has not yet started, its only the tip of the iceberg for you guys. And guess what, America, UK and the whole lot of them will keep encouraging these useless leaders because they are the only ones that will benefit.
I weep for you guy and I do not feel sorry for you.
I think they should cut down the budget to suit the revenue. Start from there and then see other areas to generate revenue. encourage citizens who are impacting on the economy.This country should cut its coat according to its material jare.
ReplyDeleteAny sensible government will be implementing cuts in their expenditures not this APC lot. We do not need to borrow a dime from anybody. We can carry on the so called capital developments in 2017. Oilprices will not stay down forever. Nigerians need to stand up to wicked and corrupt politicians who are myopic in their thinking and dealings and are only thinking of how to get the latest phones, houses, cars at the expense of our future. We do not need any loan.
ReplyDeleteI always knew APC was all about themselves.