Economy
Scarcity of New Naira Notes Worries Nigerians as Deadline Draws Closer
By Dipo Olowookere
Some Nigerians have expressed serious concerns over the scarcity of the new Naira notes in circulation, also a month after the banks were allowed to make them available to their customers officially.
On October 26, 2022, the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr Godwin Emefiele, at a special press briefing, announced that the bank would redesign the N200, N500, and N1,000 banknotes.
According to him, the move was to control the amount of cash in circulation as the central bank had observed that more than 80 per cent of the money in circulation was not in the banking vaults.
On November 23, 2022, President Muhammadu Buhari unveiled the new notes, and on December 15, 2022, they became available for Nigerians through the banks.
During his chat with newsmen last October, Mr Emefiele said the old banknotes would remain valid until after January 31, 2023.
His announcement was met with mixed feelings, with some asking the central bank to extend the deadline for the mopping up of the old Naira notes from the system as it was too short.
But the CBN has maintained that it would not extend the date from January 31, 2023.
About two weeks ago, Business Post reported that Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) of most commercial banks in the country were still dispensing old notes to customers.
Also, bank customers were still being given the old Naira denominations from over-the-counter (OTC) due to the scarcity of the new notes.
In the report, a staff of one of the commercial banks, who asked for anonymity, said they were instructed to ration the notes, while another bank representative confirmed that the new notes are “being rationed” because the CBN has not provided sufficient amounts to banks.
With about three weeks to the deadline for the old notes to cease to be legal tender in Nigeria, some Nigerians, especially POS operators, are raising concerns about the scarcity of the new notes.
One of the operators, who identified herself as Mrs Shakirat Adediran, said she does not know what step to take as the deadline draws closer.
She also informed this reporter that some of her customers reject the new notes whenever she pays them with them.
“I am really confused about what to do. I intend to stop accepting the old notes from the last week of the deadline and take them to the bank. I do not want to be caught unawares.
“Also, the problem is when we go to banks to get cash, we are given the old notes. Before now, they used to ration it, but this has stopped. They pay us in old notes.
“Even our customers reject the new notes when we give them. They complain that the money looks fake. Even the educated ones do not want to collect the redesigned Naira,” Mrs Adediran, who operates her business in Lagos, told Business Post.
This view was also echoed by a bank customer in Lagos, who identified himself as Mr Sunday Okoro. He disclosed that the new notes are very scarce.
“With the way these new Naira notes are scarce in circulation, I foresee the CBN extending the deadline. The time it gave to mop up the old notes is just too short,” Mr Okoro told this reporter.
An operator of a nails shop in the Ipaja area of Lagos, Ms Bisi Tajudeen, said “I only saw the new N1,000 note during the festive period. I am yet to see what the N200 and N500 denominations look like. The money is very scarce, and I wonder how the CBN intends to address this issue, except it wants to put many Nigerians into trouble by making their money useless after January 31 if the deadline is not extended.”
Economy
Oil Falls Ahead of US-Iran Talks, Logs Biggest Weekly Drop Since 2022
By Adedapo Adesanya
Oil futures settled lower on Friday ahead of talks between Iran and the United States aimed at securing a permanent ceasefire.
Brent futures lost 72 cents or 0.8 per cent to trade at $95.20 a barrel, while the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell by $1.30 or 1.3 per cent to $96.57 a barrel. As a result, these benchmarks posted their biggest weekly decline since 2022.
Despite the ceasefire announced earlier this week, traffic through the critical oil chokepoint remains severely restricted and under supervision and approval by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Crude futures hovered near $100 a barrel as attacks continued and the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz remained heavily restricted, and concerns lingered over potential supply disruptions in Saudi Arabia. Prices in the physical market were at record highs.
Market analysts noted that the key issue for the oil market is whether ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz will resume. However, there are no signs of this happening. If oil supplies from the Persian Gulf remain blocked, oil prices are likely to rise again.
According to Reuters, traffic through the strait remained less than 10 per cent of normal volumes as Iran warned ships to keep to its territorial waters. Most ships that have sailed through the Strait in the past day were linked to Iran.
Iran also wants to charge fees for ships to pass through the Strait under a peace deal.
Oil prices could spike and hit again their peak Iran-war levels at nearly $120 per barrel if a full recovery of vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz takes until July, according to JP Morgan.
Attacks on Saudi energy facilities have cut the kingdom’s oil production capacity by about 600,000 barrels per day and reduced its East-West Pipeline throughput by about 700,000 barrels per day.
Meanwhile, Lebanon said it intends to take part in a meeting with the US and Israeli representatives in Washington next week to discuss and announce a ceasefire.
Economy
Oyedele Admits FG Working to Correct Errors in New Tax Laws
By Dipo Olowookere
The Minister of State for Finance, Mr Taiwo Oyedele, has finally admitted that the new controversial tax laws have some errors, which he said the federal government was working to correct.
Before becoming a Minister a few weeks ago, Mr Oyedele headed the Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee set up by President Bola Tinubu to formulate new tax laws for Nigeria.
In a post on X by the team on Friday, it was disclosed that the former employee of PwC noted that the discrepancies occurred due to manual processes and multiple stages of review, but steps were underway to correct identified issues through a proposed finance bill.
“What we need is a more transparent and reliable legislative process where every version of a law is publicly available,” he stated at the 2026 Annual Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association Section on Legal Practice.
At the event themed, From Policy to Practice: Making Sense of Nigeria’s New Tax Reforms, Mr Oyedele underscored the critical role of legal practitioners in shaping economic outcomes through tax advisory and compliance.
“The decisions lawyers help businesses make will determine investment, job creation, and revenue generation,” he said, calling for greater impact and efficiency, as Nigeria still lags behind countries like South Africa in tax collection.
“If we improve collection, we can significantly increase funding for infrastructure, education, and healthcare,” he added, urging lawyers to focus on effective implementation, stressing that the success of the reforms ultimately depends on how well they are applied in practice.
The Minister declared that enforcing Nigeria’s new tax laws would not be arbitrary, emphasising that reforms are rooted in clear policy intent, transparency, and fairness.
He stressed the importance of understanding the rationale behind tax laws rather than focusing solely on their provisions, pointing out that many professionals often overlook the underlying purpose of tax legislation, noting that policy intent should guide both interpretation and implementation.
According to him, the reform process prioritised creating incentives for businesses to formalise, while ensuring policy consistency and reducing discretion in tax administration.
On inclusivity, Mr Oyedele said the new tax framework deliberately protects low-income earners and small businesses.
He revealed that individuals earning around N1 million annually and a large portion of small businesses, estimated at 30 to 40 million, have limited capacity to pay taxes and are therefore shielded under the reforms.
“Nearly half of working Nigerians earn less than N70,000 monthly. Taxing them aggressively would be unjust,” he said, adding that the reforms also eliminate practices such as minimum tax payments on loss-making businesses, which he described as effectively taxing capital rather than profit.
The Minister noted that essential goods and services, including food, education, and healthcare, have been exempted from Value Added Tax (VAT), making the system more progressive.
He further explained that the reforms consolidated multiple tax laws into four major pieces of legislation, including the Nigeria Tax Act and the Nigeria Tax Administration Act, aimed at simplifying compliance and improving coordination among tax authorities.
Economy
UN to Help Attract Mining, Agric Investors to Zamfara
By Modupe Gbadeyanka
The United Nations has expressed its readiness to assist in attracting investors to Zamfara State, especially in the mining and agricultural sectors.
The Deputy Secretary General of the global body, Mrs Amina Mohammed, during a visit on Thursday, said the northern Nigerian state is now ready for business and that the UN was willing to be a genuine partner to the state.
“Investors want an enabling environment. Peace is what you need today for people to come. The Zamfara narrative focuses on conflict related to solid minerals, and this needs to change,” she was quoted as saying in a statement issued on Friday by the spokesperson for the Zamfara Governor, Mr Sulaiman Bala Idris.
The former Nigerian Minister further said, “What you show us today is first and foremost your passion for what you want us to do, and that is what investors want. They want to know what you want.
“I am happy today to be here in Zamfara, because I really want to show the world that we should pay attention to what is happening at the local level. Because this is where people are weakest, where governance is weakest, and where there are the fewest resources.
“When we visit, we give visibility to the effort that has been made and to the impact of what is happening elsewhere in the world on people who have nothing to do with what caused it in the first place.
“Zamfara State is accessible today. And it would be even more accessible because the road we travelled on is still under construction. When it is finished, it will revive the businesses and markets around it, and hopefully, by then, we will witness more peace.
“I see the mining, I see the potentials, I see the market and the demand, but I also see the leadership here who is willing to look at the institution, framework and partner to get the job done.
“There is a lot of hope and potential here. Everyone must play their role; this is not something the governor will do alone. The United Nations is willing to be a genuine partner to Zamfara State.”
On his part, Governor Dauda Lawal said Zamfara is at a turning point, with a population of 5.3 million, and the state’s economy is agriculture-driven, with 82 per cent of the population depending on agriculture.
“Zamfara’s Six-Point Rescue Agenda is a deliberate strategy to stabilise, rebuild, and transition the state toward inclusive and sustainable development,” he told his guest.
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