Pay Tax or Fail Your Duty: Tinubu Tells Nigerians at Africa CEO Forum
Pay Tax or Fail Your Duty: Tinubu Tells Nigerians

President Bola Tinubu has called on Nigerians to fulfill their tax obligations, emphasizing that tax payment is essential for funding infrastructure, healthcare, education, and welfare programs for vulnerable citizens.

Tinubu Speaks at Africa CEO Forum

Speaking on Friday, May 15, at the Africa CEO Forum in Kigali, the President noted that many citizens demand better roads, hospitals, and social amenities but fail to pay their taxes.

“Nobody wants to pay taxes. Yet everyone expects development. You want good roads and well-equipped hospitals, but you don’t want to contribute through taxes. The question is: how do we fund development and secure the future of our children? A citizen who pays tax is a citizen. If you are not paying taxes and not exempted, then you are not fulfilling your obligation,” he said.

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Defense of Economic Reforms

The President also defended the economic reforms introduced by his administration, including the removal of fuel subsidy and the unification of the foreign exchange market. He described these as difficult but necessary measures aimed at stabilizing the economy.

According to him, Nigeria could no longer sustain subsidy payments and policies that encouraged corruption and smuggling.

“It was necessary to reset and reform the economy. We were spending future generations’ resources before they were born,” Tinubu said.

Pre-Reform Challenges

Reflecting on the state of the economy before the reforms, the President said several states struggled to pay salaries despite Nigeria’s oil wealth.

“You are producing oil, spending heavily on fuel subsidy, yet your refineries are not working. That trend was unsustainable,” he noted.

Positive Outcomes Emerging

Tinubu acknowledged that the reforms initially triggered hardship and criticism but said early signs indicated that the policies were beginning to produce positive outcomes.

He stated that the naira had become more stable and predictable, making it easier for businesses and government institutions to plan effectively.

The President further explained that savings from the reforms had enabled the government to expand intervention programs for students and vulnerable households through educational support and direct assistance initiatives.

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