Tag: Budget Office of the Federation

  • Fed Govt explains how lowest income earners will pay zero tax

    Fed Govt explains how lowest income earners will pay zero tax

    The Federal Government has explained how low income earners will pay zero tax in the new regime, which took effect on January 1.

    In a statement yesterday, Director-General (DG) in the Budget Office of the Federation, Tanimu Yakubu, made the clarification in response to what he called “wrong notions, stage-managed arithmetic, selective accounting and misrepresentation of the law” by those sponsored to discredit the government policy.

    Yakubu highlighted the N800, 000 annual tax-free threshold under the new personal income tax structure as the most critical omission in the criticism, explaining that the first N800,000 of annual income attracts a zero per cent tax rate, as against the previous framework that lumped low-income earners into equal tax bracket.

    Using an illustrative example of a worker earning N75,000 monthly, Yakubu noted that such a person earns N900,000 annually, placing only N100,000 above the zero-rated band.

    According to him, even at a 15 per cent rate on the excess of N100, 000, the tax exposure would amount to N15, 000 a year, before deductions. But once pension contributions are applied, the taxable portion drops sharply and could fall to zero if other allowable deductions, such as health insurance, are included.

    READ ALSO: Kano’s unfolding power game

    Yakubu said: “Under the new regime described in multiple reputable summaries, the first N800, 000 of annual income is taxed at 0 per cent. That is not a footnote. That is the hinge. Now apply it to “Joseph”: Monthly income: N75, 000. Annual income: N75,000 × 12 = N900,000.

    “Under a system where the first N800, 000 is taxed at 0 per cent, Joseph is not ‘squarely inside’ some punitive bracket. He is N100, 000 above the zero band. Even before deductions, the portion potentially exposed to tax is N100, 000 per year.

    “If the next band is taxed at 15 per cent as these summaries indicate, then Joseph’s gross annual PIT exposure is: N100, 000 × 15 per cent = N15,000 per year, N1, 250 per month.

    “Now add pension: If Joseph contributes pension at 8 per cent, even using the essay’s own assumption, that is: N900, 000 × 8 per cent = N72, 000 in pension contributions annually, simplified. That reduces the portion above N800, 000 from N100, 000 to N28, 000. Tax becomes: N28, 000 × 15 per cent = N4, 200 per year, N350 per month.

    “And if Joseph also has any deductible health insurance contribution, which many formal arrangements do, he can easily fall below N800, 000 taxable income, making his PIT zero. What this means is that the essay’s ‘public U-turn’ story is not proof that ‘the poor will pay tax’.

    The DG added: “A deduction is not a tax, and a contribution you own is not a levy you lose. Such deductions, in fact, reduce taxable income and demonstrate an effort to protect workers’ welfare rather than exploit it.

    “It is proof that the narrator’s demonstration did not apply the actual threshold structure that defines liability. That is not logic. That is stage-managed arithmetic,” Yakubu stated in a factual rebuttal of the wrong notion being pushed by the critic.

    He also faulted the use of global poverty lines in the criticism, noting that the World Bank’s $4.20-a-day benchmark was a purchasing power parity (PPP) measure, not a nominal wage threshold that could be converted directly into naira using market exchange rates, pointing out that such conversions turned technical welfare metrics into political talking points.

    On the claim that “widening the tax base” necessarily meant taxing the poor, Yakubu described it as a false syllogism.

    He said tax base expansion could involve bringing non-compliant high earners into the net, closing loopholes, capturing affluent segments of the digital and informal economy, and strengthening employer withholding, rather than targeting subsistence incomes.

    Yakubu further argued that long lists of alleged corruption and mismanagement, while raising legitimate governance concerns, did not invalidate the structure of a tax schedule.

    He said the logical response to accountability concerns was to improve transparency, auditing and enforcement, not to misrepresent tax reforms aimed at reducing Nigeria’s reliance on borrowing.

    Yakubu said: “The outrage depends on omitting the very thresholds and concepts that make its conclusion collapse. The new tax structure explicitly protects low incomes and that claims to the contrary were driven more by narrative devices than by arithmetic grounded in law.

    “Nigeria’s revenue problem is not ‘the poor escaping’. Nigeria’s problem is a historically weak tax-to-GDP ratio and heavy reliance on borrowing; tax reforms have been publicly framed as part of reversing that.

    “So ‘widening’ does not necessarily mean ‘drag subsistence wages into the net’. It often means: make the system catch who already should be paying”.

    Yakubu noted that the narrative branding the policy as “Bola’s tax” deliberately ignored key provisions designed to shield low-income earners.

    The essay written by one Emmanuel Orjih, the Budget Office DG said, was “built on powerful but false rhetorics, simply achieved by engaging in selective accounting”.

    He said the argument relied on emotional framing rather than the actual structure of the tax schedule approved under the new regime.

    According to Taminu, at the centre of the misinformation was a “category error” in which pension and health insurance contributions were wrongly presented as taxes.

    He explained that pension payments are deferred wages owned by workers and lodged in their Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs), while health insurance premiums are contributions that purchase defined coverage, not compulsory levies for general government spending.

  • Budget Office cautions against speculation on tax reform acts

    Budget Office cautions against speculation on tax reform acts

    The Budget Office of the Federation has defended the credibility of Nigeria’s recently enacted Tax Reform Acts.

    In its defence, the Budget of the Federation cautioned against what it described as “governance by speculation and unverified claims,” following allegations that the laws were altered after passage.

    In a statement issued on Wednesday, and signed by Dr. Tanimu Yakubu, Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation, the Office said it had taken note of concerns raised by the Minority Caucus of the House of Representatives, stressing that the sanctity of the law is central to constitutional democracy and goes beyond procedural formality.

    According to the statement, any suggestion that a law could be modified after debate, passage, authentication, and presidential assent without following due process would “strike at the core of the Republic” and undermine citizens’ right to be governed by transparent and stable laws.

    However, Tanimu Yakubu also warned that democratic stability is threatened when unconfirmed claims are amplified in the public space. “A nation cannot be governed by insinuation or sustained on circulating documents of uncertain origin,” it said, adding that public confidence, once shaken by speculation, is often difficult to restore.

    The Budget Office noted that both government and citizens share a common interest in truth, clarity and due process, pointing out that public finance depends heavily on trust in the legality and clarity of fiscal laws. It welcomed the decision of the National Assembly to investigate the allegations, describing institutional inquiry — not conjecture — as the appropriate response to claims of illegality.

    On access to the law, Yakubu acknowledged that Nigerians and the business community are entitled to clear and authoritative texts of all laws they are required to obey. It clarified, however, that the authenticity of legislation is determined by certified legislative records and official publication processes, not by informal or viral reproductions.

    The statement drew attention to the importance of separation of powers, warning that claims suggesting that Nigeria is being governed by “fake laws,” if not backed by established facts, risk eroding confidence in democratic institutions. At the same time, it said legislative scrutiny should not be treated as antagonism, noting that oversight is a constitutional duty.

    From a fiscal standpoint, the Office stated that legal certainty is essential for revenue projections, macroeconomic stability, budget credibility, and investor confidence. While acknowledging that it is not the custodian of legislative records, it observed that uncertainty around operative tax provisions directly affects economic planning.

    To restore confidence, the Tanimu Yakubu proposed several measures, including publication of verified reference texts in a single public repository, orderly access to Certified True Copies for stakeholders, clear public explanations where discrepancies are alleged, and strict alignment of all implementing regulations with authenticated legal texts.

    Responding to calls for suspension of the tax reforms, the Budget Office cautioned against allowing prudence to slip into inaction. It argued that properly implemented tax reform is necessary to reduce dependence on borrowing and inflationary financing, while easing indirect burdens on vulnerable citizens.

    “Where clarification is required, it must be provided; where correction is required, it must be effected; where investigation is required, it must proceed,” the statement said, adding that governance and reform should not be stalled by unresolved conjecture.

    The Office concluded by describing taxation as a democratic covenant that binds citizens and the state, insisting that compliance depends on transparency and trust. It called on political actors to protect institutions as much as positions, urging citizens and businesses to rely on verified sources and resist the spread of unauthenticated information.

    Tanimu Yakubu said the agency remains committed to fiscal transparency, institutional integrity, and reforms that advance national prosperity while safeguarding citizens’ rights.