ABUJA — President Bola Ahmed Tinubu held a high-level strategic meeting on Monday with the Minister of State for Finance-designate, Taiwo Oyedele, at the State House. The audience signals a transition from policy design to aggressive implementation as the administration moves to modernize Nigeria’s “leaky” revenue framework and eliminate the long-standing burden of multiple taxation.
Oyedele, the former Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reform, is widely regarded as the primary architect of the administration’s plan to simplify the tax code and boost non-oil revenue.
From Proposals to Power: The Oyedele Mandate
As he prepares to assume his ministerial role, Oyedele’s primary focus is the execution of the consolidated tax reform proposals his committee developed over the past year. These reforms are designed to:
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Harmonize Tax Laws: Reducing the sheer number of taxes—currently exceeding 60 across three tiers of government—to a more manageable, single-digit figure.
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Expand the Tax Base: Moving away from increasing tax rates and instead focusing on bringing more high-net-worth individuals and large informal entities into the net.
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Modernize Administration: Implementing digital-first collection systems to reduce human interference and leakages in the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and state-level agencies.
Strengthening the Non-Oil Economy
The meeting comes at a critical juncture as the Federal Government seeks to reduce its dependency on volatile crude oil receipts. By appointing a technical expert like Oyedele to the Finance Ministry, the President is signaling to global investors and credit agencies that fiscal discipline is the new standard.
Expected Strategic Priorities:
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Eliminating “Nuisance” Taxes: Scrapping small, low-yield taxes that increase the cost of doing business without significantly adding to the treasury.
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Boosting Revenue-to-GDP: Nigeria currently has one of the lowest revenue-to-GDP ratios in the world; the new team is tasked with doubling this within the next 36 months.
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Transparency in Public Finance: Ensuring that every naira collected is tracked and efficiently mobilized for national development projects.
A Proven Track Record
Before this designation, Oyedele spent years as a top partner at PwC, where he was a leading voice on West African fiscal policy. His deep involvement in the “Renewed Hope” economic roadmap means he enters the State House not as a newcomer, but as a trusted lieutenant with a ready-made blueprint for stability.
“When the tax system is simple, compliance goes up,” Oyedele has frequently noted. “Our goal is not to tax poverty, but to tax prosperity and use that to lift the nation.”
