The Fear Of Colonial Taxation: Why Nigeria’s 2026 Tax Laws Worry Many Citizens

To many, the 2026 tax laws in Nigeria carry the weight of suspicion, frustration, and fear. With the proposed 2026 taxation laws, that burden risks becoming heavier, and for many Nigerians, dangerously so. To critics, these laws resemble nothing less than colonial taxation, a system designed not to empower the people, but to extract from them in ways that favour distant interests, corrupt politicians and public office holders over local survival. And many fear the taxation, seeing Nigeria government signing contract agreement with France, a country that has no atom of mercy, as evidenced by their oprations in many regions in Africa.
Colonial taxation, historically, was never about development or shared prosperity. It was about control, revenue extraction, and enforcement through pressure. Many Nigerians see troubling similarities today. The 2026 tax framework, as currently understood, threatens to place excessive financial strain on individuals and businesses that are already struggling under inflation, insecurity, unemployment, and unstable infrastructure.
Small and medium-sized enterprises, the backbone of the Nigerian economy, are likely to be hit the hardest. With higher tax obligations and complex compliance requirements, many business owners may find themselves trapped in a system where survival depends not on productivity, but on negotiation. This is where the danger deepens: a web of corrupt tax enforcement.
When tax laws become harsh and unclear, they often create fertile ground for abuse. Tax officials, empowered by broad discretion, may impose inflated assessments only to later “reduce” them in exchange for bribes. For the average trader, artisan, or startup owner, the choice becomes grim: pay an unfair tax, pay a bribe, or shut down entirely. None of these outcomes supports economic growth or public trust.
The consequences could stretch far beyond local shops and offices. Investors, both foreign and local, watch tax policies closely. A system perceived as punitive and corrupt sends a clear message: capital is not safe here. Faced with uncertainty and mounting costs, many investors may choose to sell off their businesses and move their funds to more predictable economies. The long-term result is fewer jobs, reduced innovation, and a shrinking tax base, the very opposite of what taxation is meant to achieve.
There is also a human cost that cannot be ignored. Financial stress is not just an economic issue; it is a health issue. When families and business owners are pushed to the edge by overwhelming tax demands, anxiety and stress can take a serious toll. For some, the pressure of mounting bills and fear of enforcement actions can lead to severe health crises, which inevitably will cost many their precious lives. A tax system should never be so harsh that it endangers lives and businesses through relentless stress and uncertainty.
Nigeria does not need a tax regime that feels like a throwback to colonial rule. It needs one rooted in fairness, transparency, and accountability; one that encourages compliance by building trust, not fear. Taxes should be a shared contribution to national development, not a weapon that deepens inequality and drives citizens and investors away.
If the 2026 taxation laws are to succeed, they must be re-examined with the Nigerian people at the center. Otherwise, instead of serving as a path to progress, it will be a modern form of colonial taxation imposed on a population already stretched to its limits.
Ambassador Ezewele Cyril Abionanojie is the author of the book ‘The Enemy Called Corruption’ an award winner of Best Columnist of the year 2020, Giant in Security Support, Statesmanship Integrity & Productivity Award Among others. He is the President of Peace Ambassador Global.

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