Close Menu
Fishe News
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • International
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • PMNI
  • More
    • Business
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Health
  • Featured
    • Fishe Travel
    • Fishe Media
    • Fishe TV
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya
  • Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson
  • JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs
  • Protecting Children In The Digital Age
  • Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD
  • “Obasanjo Reignites Debate On NNPC Refineries, Says They May Never Work Again”
  • “Airlines Threaten Shutdown As Jet Fuel Prices Soar Above ₦3,000”
  • Sustaining Momentum: Evaluating Progress In The DRC–Rwanda Peace Process
X (Twitter) Instagram
Fishe NewsFishe News
Subscribe
Wednesday, April 29
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • International
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • PMNI
  • More
    • Business
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Health
  • Featured
    • Fishe Travel
    • Fishe Media
    • Fishe TV
Fishe News
Home»National

Tax Reform D-Day: Manufacturers Applaud As Labour, SMEs Prepare Resistance

As implementation nears, support from manufacturers contrasts sharply with resistance from labour unions and small businesses.
Adejuyigbe AdegokeBy Adejuyigbe AdegokeDecember 29, 2025 National No Comments4 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp

With just four days to go before the implementation of Nigeria’s most sweeping tax overhaul in decades, the nation’s socioeconomic landscape is heating up with diverging reactions. Set to take effect from January 1, 2026, the newly enacted tax reform laws have drawn applause from some quarters and intense criticism from others — particularly organised labour and small business operators.

The Reform at a Glance

The tax reform package — consisting of four major laws: the Nigeria Tax Act, Nigeria Tax Administration Act, Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act, and the Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act — was signed into law in June 2025 by President Bola Tinubu, after extensive legislative review.

The government and its reform committee say the changes are designed to simplify and modernise a long-fragmented tax system, encourage investment, and make the fiscal regime fairer and more growth-oriented.

Under the new regime:

  • Around 97% of small businesses will be exempted from key taxes like Corporate Income Tax (CIT), Value-Added Tax (VAT), and Withholding Tax (WHT).





  • Thresholds and exemptions for low-income and middle-income earners have been introduced to reduce the burden on ordinary workers.

  • A single tax authority — the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) — will replace the existing Federal Inland Revenue Service to harmonise tax collection.

Despite these planned reliefs and simplifications, the approach to implementing the changes has sparked fierce debate.

Manufacturers Back the Reform

The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), has publicly backed the tax reform laws. MAN’s Director-General, Segun Ajayi-Kadir, described the regime as pro-business and anticipates significant relief for manufacturers, particularly from the multitude of nuisance taxes levied at sub-national levels.

According to Ajayi-Kadir, the reforms will free manufacturers from petty levies and create a more predictable tax environment — crucial for planning and investment. He also pointed out that businesses with turnovers below ₦100 million annually would benefit from exemptions on major taxes, which he believes will stimulate growth at the grassroots level.

Labour Threatens Revolt Over Exclusion and Lack of Clarity

In stark contrast, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), has warned of a possible revolt should the reforms be implemented without sufficient consultation and transparency. The labour body insists it was neither involved in drafting the laws nor adequately briefed after they were signed.

NLC spokesperson, Benson Upah, criticised the lack of public enlightenment and accused the government of sidelining workers — who are among the largest group of taxpayers. Upah expressed concerns over opaque processes, particularly around how new tax agents might operate and how revenues will be collected and used, warning that these could provoke widespread resistance if unresolved.

In a related development, the NLC President has urged citizens to reject any version of the tax laws that appear distorted or improperly gazetted, further signalling labour’s readiness to mobilise if key grievances aren’t addressed.

SMEs Call for Suspension

Small and medium-sized enterprises — key drivers of Nigeria’s economy — have also raised red flags. Organisations like the Association of Small Business Owners of Nigeria (ASBON), argue that many micro and small enterprises do not yet understand the new tax framework, and rushing its enforcement could lead to widespread confusion and failure of compliance.

ASBON President, Femi Egbesola, stressed the need for a suspension of implementation to allow for more comprehensive stakeholder engagement, clearer guidelines, and even a pilot phase before nationwide rollout.

He warned that inadequate awareness might trigger resistance or active protest among the small business community.

Government Defends the Timeline

In defence of the timeline, Taiwo Oyedele — Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms — has maintained that delaying the reforms would mean retaining an outdated and overburdened tax system.

He warned that such delays could lead to higher prices for basic goods and services, counteracting the intended relief that the new regime aims to deliver.

The government argues that comprehensive tax reform is essential to boosting compliance, reducing wasteful incentives, and broadening the tax base without introducing new levies.

What Happens Next

With only days to go before January 1, stakeholders remain sharply divided. Supporters in the manufacturing sector are optimistic about the potential for a more streamlined and investment-friendly tax system.

In contrast, labour unions and SMEs are demanding greater transparency, stakeholder inclusion, and a slower, more consultative rollout.

As implementation nears, the government faces the challenge of balancing urgent economic reform with widespread acceptance — a task critical to ensuring the success of one of Nigeria’s most ambitious fiscal policy shifts in recent history.

#Francis #labour Adegoke Adejuyigbe D-Day Economist Fiscal policy Fishe Media Fishe News Manufacturers Marketing Comms Policymaker PR Agency Reform Resistance SMEs taiwo Oyedele Tax
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
Adejuyigbe Adegoke
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Publisher.

Keep Reading

Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya

Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson

JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs

Protecting Children In The Digital Age

Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD

“Obasanjo Reignites Debate On NNPC Refineries, Says They May Never Work Again”

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Here is spotlighting many benefits of journeying with either Lagos State’s Blueline or Redline rails for a hassle-free day, week, month and year. Thank God for the Igbega Eko. Together we rise.
https://youtu.be/V67GV8wgyjw

Latest Posts

  • Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya
  • Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson
  • JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs
  • Protecting Children In The Digital Age
  • Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD
Featured
About Fishe

FISHE was founded with the goal of helping clients thrive in today’s highly competitive marketing environment. While other companies rush to abandon traditional marketing in favour of digital techniques, we’ve bolstered our offline marketing capabilities while also equipping our team with seasoned professional knowledge to support our clients’ digital needs.

Through creative designs, we enhance our clients’ products and services the right way that would attract their target audience, thus, making the perception of their company a reality.

  • LTV 8, Agidingbi Road, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos.
  • +234 806 003 7277
  • info@gofishe.com
FISHE, Your Best Plug For Bus Stop Shelter Ad

LATEST POSTS

Guest Column: The $67 Million Disco — Why Nigeria Is Mispricing Its Power Sector — Adebayo Adesanya

April 29, 2026

Appointment Of Thomas “Tommy” Pigott As U.S. State Department Spokesperson

April 29, 2026

JUST-IN: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To ₦1,275/Litre Amid Rising Crude Costs

April 29, 2026

Protecting Children In The Digital Age

April 27, 2026

Beyond The Present Impasse: A Calibrated, Five-Pillar Strategic Roadmap For Restoring The Credibility, Cohesion, and Popular Legitimacy Of The Economic Community Of West African States — Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD

April 27, 2026
Featured

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from FISHE about politics, economy, health and business, etc

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
© 2026

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.