Mitigating the Implementation Gap: Social Protection and Communication Strategies for the 2026 Tax Reforms
Working Paper
Nigeria’s 2026 Tax Reform Law represents a pivotal shift toward fiscal sustainability, yet its success is threatened by a widening "implementation gap" and public mistrust. While the reform introduces a landmark ₦800,000 tax-free threshold to shield low-income earners, the simultaneous introduction of a 4% development levy and mandatory digital VAT invoicing has sparked anxiety among Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). Recent market data indicate that despite these progressive thresholds, the 15% core inflation rate threatens to neutralize tax savings for the most vulnerable households. Current strategies rely heavily on top-down gazetting but lack the grassroots communication and social safety anchors necessary to prevent economic shock. Lessons from the recent fuel subsidy removal show that policy technicality without "social protection empathy" leads to public resistance. This policy brief proposes a legislative action to bridge this gap through: (1) an SME Tax holiday Clause; (2) the institutionalization of a "citizen’s Tax feedback loop"; and (3) a legislated social protection cushion tied directly to VAT revenue. By aligning fiscal discipline with human-centered communication, these reforms will ensure the 2026 Tax Act serves as a tool for growth rather than a burden on the working class.
