The Jigawa State House of Assembly’s passage of the Harmonised Taxes and Levies Bill marks more than a local legislative step because it is a high-stakes gamble taken in an atmosphere of deep national anxiety, where the lofty promises of federal tax reform collide with a public’s profound distrust and the ghosts of past economic hardships.
While the federal government and the Joint Revenue Board (JRB) hail Jigawa’s move—and similar actions in Plateau, Kogi, Nasarawa, and Kwara states—as a “significant milestone” for creating a “transparent and business-friendly” environment, the reality on the ground tells a more fraught story. Across Nigeria, the rollout of the new tax laws since January 1, 2026, has been met not with celebration, but with a “lingering sense of distrust” and “reform fatigue” from citizens and business owners already pushed to the brink by inflation and subsidy removal.
A Crisis of Legitimacy and Broken Promises
The foundation of the entire reform is cracking under the weight of a legitimacy crisis. Lawmakers, including Abdussamad Dasuki, have raised alarming allegations that the versions of the tax laws gazetted and now being implemented contain serious, unauthorized alterations from what was debated and passed by the National Assembly. This has created what civil society leader Auwal Musa Rafsanjani calls a “question of clarity and legitimacy,” severely undermining public confidence before the first naira is even collected under the new system.

This distrust is rooted in lived experience. The government’s failure to transparently account for the massive savings from the 2023 fuel subsidy removal has left a bitter legacy. As Rafsanjani notes, promises that savings would translate to better healthcare, education, and infrastructure “remained largely elusive and unfulfilled”. For the trader in Lagos, the shop owner in Dutse, and the salary earner nationwide, the fear is that this new, aggressive revenue drive will again mean more money extracted from their pockets with little to show in return.
Lofty Goals vs. Harsh Realities on the Ground
The reforms propose sensible goals: to streamline over 60 different taxes, protect low-income earners, and bring more people into the tax net. Jigawa’s version specifically promises to outlaw the hated practice of using roadblocks for tax collection.
Yet, these promises ring hollow to many. Business owners, especially in the massive informal sector that employs over 90% of Nigerians, fear that “different agencies still come to collect different levies”. They worry about overlapping demands and increased harassment, despite assurances of harmonisation. The new requirement for all vendors to have a Tax Identification Number (TIN)—with stiff penalties for those who contract without one—is seen as wildly out of touch with the cash-based, low-margin reality of Nigeria’s informal economy.
Navigating a Political Minefield
The Tinubu administration is navigating a political minefield. The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprises (CPPE) warns that implementing such sweeping changes during a “pre-election year” with a populace suffering “reform fatigue” is exceptionally risky. Security consulting firm SBM Intelligence projects that the “real impact” of the laws could “ignite nationwide protests” as citizens feel the pinch.
The opposition has already framed the reforms as “an assault on the livelihood of ordinary Nigerians”. For Jigawa and other states domesticating these laws, the challenge is twofold: they must not only build new technical systems but also perform the near-impossible task of rebuilding a shattered social contract. As economist Dr. Muda Yusuf states, “trust is as critical as technical design,” and in Nigeria today, that trust is in critically short supply.
The bill on Governor Umar Namadi’s desk is, therefore, more than a revenue policy; it is a litmus test. Will Jigawa’s implementation prove the reform’s proponents right by delivering clarity and ending arbitrary collections? Or will it become a case study in the “resistance, disrupted livelihoods, and further eroded public trust” that experts warn is the likely outcome if the government’s approach remains tone-deaf to the justified fears of its people? The path from a passed bill to public acceptance is fraught, and Jigawa is now on the front line of Nigeria’s great tax experiment.
















