Zürcher Nachrichten - Nigeria's Tinubu signs major tax overhaul

EUR -
AED 4.323021
AFN 74.150311
ALL 96.218545
AMD 443.652434
ANG 2.106483
AOA 1079.293101
ARS 1636.608423
AUD 1.667894
AWG 2.118569
AZN 1.989324
BAM 1.955049
BBD 2.371858
BDT 143.904085
BGN 1.939251
BHD 0.443792
BIF 3490.930617
BMD 1.176983
BND 1.492807
BOB 8.137907
BRL 6.135143
BSD 1.177632
BTN 107.21443
BWP 15.631793
BYN 3.355768
BYR 23068.860452
BZD 2.36839
CAD 1.611507
CDF 2671.750871
CHF 0.912755
CLF 0.025792
CLP 1018.395958
CNY 8.131479
CNH 8.119009
COP 4356.224741
CRC 565.875318
CUC 1.176983
CUP 31.190041
CVE 110.81249
CZK 24.243022
DJF 209.172923
DKK 7.471837
DOP 72.090182
DZD 153.117219
EGP 55.907617
ERN 17.65474
ETB 183.079428
FJD 2.590304
FKP 0.869533
GBP 0.874428
GEL 3.154077
GGP 0.869533
GHS 12.952636
GIP 0.869533
GMD 86.505479
GNF 10330.961173
GTQ 9.035528
GYD 246.372177
HKD 9.197384
HNL 31.201669
HRK 7.536101
HTG 154.358711
HUF 379.61046
IDR 19898.069122
ILS 3.681725
IMP 0.869533
INR 107.152915
IQD 1542.435797
IRR 49580.395416
ISK 144.898421
JEP 0.869533
JMD 183.490263
JOD 0.834509
JPY 182.512934
KES 151.831112
KGS 102.926986
KHR 4731.470767
KMF 493.155747
KPW 1059.280928
KRW 1706.854403
KWD 0.361004
KYD 0.98131
KZT 579.929737
LAK 25216.853857
LBP 105398.798357
LKR 364.299997
LRD 217.682798
LSL 19.037723
LTL 3.475324
LVL 0.711945
LYD 7.444411
MAD 10.791171
MDL 20.160995
MGA 5102.219993
MKD 61.644044
MMK 2471.192553
MNT 4202.22379
MOP 9.478736
MRU 47.055799
MUR 54.36693
MVR 18.123343
MWK 2044.419004
MXN 20.308859
MYR 4.600586
MZN 75.221301
NAD 19.043906
NGN 1582.382398
NIO 43.191017
NOK 11.245228
NPR 171.542888
NZD 1.970458
OMR 0.452473
PAB 1.177652
PEN 3.959951
PGK 5.064508
PHP 68.307341
PKR 329.025329
PLN 4.223426
PYG 7635.065783
QAR 4.285407
RON 5.097511
RSD 117.451296
RUB 90.333859
RWF 1713.686776
SAR 4.415185
SBD 9.476665
SCR 16.216275
SDG 707.955518
SEK 10.669483
SGD 1.492967
SHP 0.883042
SLE 28.826201
SLL 24680.737462
SOS 672.645812
SRD 44.281573
STD 24361.165077
STN 24.716636
SVC 10.30404
SYP 13016.928056
SZL 19.043612
THB 36.708321
TJS 11.128381
TMT 4.131209
TND 3.366214
TOP 2.833892
TRY 51.501705
TTD 7.970835
TWD 37.178523
TZS 3048.385098
UAH 50.941023
UGX 4221.359765
USD 1.176983
UYU 45.352571
UZS 14329.763747
VES 468.73002
VND 30566.240098
VUV 139.522752
WST 3.1793
XAF 655.696654
XAG 0.015025
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.180855
XCG 2.122357
XDR 0.814093
XOF 652.048563
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.714615
ZAR 19.004154
ZMK 10594.259368
ZMW 22.121592
ZWL 378.987941
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    17.8

    -1.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.76

    -0.21%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.95

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    -1.2200

    84.38

    -1.45%

  • NGG

    -0.5400

    90.27

    -0.6%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.05

    -1%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    15.53

    -0.84%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    25.57

    -0.55%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    96.34

    -2.69%

  • RELX

    0.4400

    30.99

    +1.42%

  • BTI

    2.1200

    60.99

    +3.48%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    60.85

    -0.54%

  • BP

    0.4800

    39.01

    +1.23%

  • AZN

    -0.0500

    208.62

    -0.02%

Nigeria's Tinubu signs major tax overhaul
Nigeria's Tinubu signs major tax overhaul / Photo: Sarah Meyssonnier - POOL/AFP

Nigeria's Tinubu signs major tax overhaul

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu on Thursday signed four landmark bills into law aiming to overhaul the country's tax system, after backing away from more controversial tweaks that would have upended revenue sharing among states.

Text size:

The west African economic powerhouse has a tax-to-GDP ratio of 13.5 percent, according to government figures, which is below the continental average.

The country, split among 36 states, has long struggled to reform its tax system -- with the government saying its new package will "harmonise" levies across the nation.

"For too long, our tax system has been a patchwork—complex, inequitable, and burdensome," Tinubu said on social media ahead of the signing, promising relief for poor and working-class Nigerians.

The president's earlier reforms -- slashing a costly fuel subsidy and liberalising the naira exchange rate -- have won the praise of economists, saying such measures were long overdue.

But they’ve also sparked massive inflation and a cost of living crisis.

The four laws -- the Nigeria Tax Law, Nigeria Tax Administration Law, Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Law, and Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Law -- are a "one-stop shop," simultaneously increasing revenue generation and reducing the tax burden on low-income earners, tax expert Chukwuema Eze told AFP.

With the country experiencing one of its worst economic crises in decades, the new laws exempt low-revenue small businesses from paying company tax and reduce corporate tax to 25 percent from 30 percent.

The new regime also streamlines tax collection and reorganises revenue-sharing between federal and state governments -- though without completely upending the system that sees poorer, mostly northern states benefit from money put into the national pot from the oil-rich south.

Major tweaks to the revenue-sharing system were dropped as the bills wound their way through the legislature, after proving controversial in a country where north and south remain divided along both economic, religious and ethnic lines.

One of the laws renames the country's tax office to Nigerian Revenue Service (NRS) and strengthens its revenue generation capacity, though the federal government's earnings from the value-added tax (VAT) will decline, with more money allocated to individual states.

- Easing business environment -

The government hopes the reforms will ease the cost of doing business for both domestic and foreign firms operating in the west African powerhouse, whose economy has dived from the largest in Africa to fourth place under Tinubu’s reforms.

However, some tax experts including Nongomin Joshua, of Nongomin & Co, Practitioners, said the reforms will mean little if the government, marred by decades of corruption, can't spend the money effectively.

"The question is, how effective, efficient, and how prudent are they managing what they have been collecting with the current taxes?" said Nongomin Joshua, of Nongomin & Co, Practitioners, an accounting group.

Economist Kelvin Emmanuel based in Abuja, the capital, said the new reforms would be key in raising the tax-to-GDP ratio, a struggle for many African countries where millions work in the informal sector.

"It will also strengthen the fiscal administration of local governments around Nigeria, as the new framework seeks to create a comprehensive governance framework for local governments around autonomy," he told AFP.

T.L.Marti--NZN