Feature/OPED
Battling Hyperinflation: How Savecoins Technologies Can Empower Low-Income Nigerians to Hedge Against Inflation with USDT
By Godstime Joseph Asukwo
Abstract
This paper examines the devastating impact of hyperinflation on low-income earners in Nigeria, where the Nigerian Naira has plummeted to a record low of 1,600 Naira to 1 US dollar. By analyzing Savecoins Technologies Inc.’s efforts to offer a platform for hedging savings in USDT, a stablecoin, this paper evaluates the effectiveness of such a product for this vulnerable demographic. It offers a comprehensive, data-driven analysis of the challenges and opportunities, along with actionable recommendations for how we, at Savecoins, can build sustainable, long-term solutions to help Nigerians secure their financial future amidst economic instability.
Introduction
The Nigerian economy has been ensnared in a relentless cycle of hyperinflation for several years, pushing the country into a state of unprecedented economic crisis. The official exchange rate of the Naira against the US dollar, once a manageable 300 Naira to 1 USD in 2021, has skyrocketed to a staggering 1,600 Naira to 1 USD in 2024. This hyperinflationary crisis has disproportionately impacted low-income earners, severely eroding their purchasing power and making it increasingly difficult to afford basic necessities.
The impact on low-income Nigerians is far more than just a matter of numbers. It’s about families struggling to feed their children, facing agonizing choices between healthcare and rent, and losing hope for a brighter future. In 2021, a family with an income of 50,000 Naira could live comfortably. Today, that same family faces a stark reality – they might only be able to purchase 1/3rd of what they could back then. This is a crisis of purchasing power, and it’s impacting millions of Nigerians.
Here is a concrete example of how prices have skyrocketed in recent years, based on real-time data:
Table 1: Inflation Impact on Essential Goods (2021 vs. 2024)
| ITEM | 2021 PRICE (NGN) | 2024 PRICE (NGN) | INCREASE (%) |
| 50kg Bag of Rice | 20,000 | 75,000 | 275% |
| 1 Liter of Petrol | 165 | 1,300 | 685% |
| Transportation (Bus Fare) | 100 | 500 | 400% |
| Basic Healthcare Consultation | 2,000 | 4,500 | 125% |
| Monthly Rent (1 Room Apartment) | 5,000 | 12,000 | 140% |
| 1 Crate of Eggs | 500 | 8,000 | 1500% |
| Monthly Electricity Bill | 3,000 | 7,000 | 133% |
| 1kg of Beef | 1,500 | 3,800 | 153% |
These numbers paint a stark picture of the financial hardship faced by low-income Nigerians. A family that could afford a decent basket of food, transportation, and basic healthcare in 2021 is now struggling to meet even those essential needs.
The Impact on Low-Income Households
Consider a family with a monthly income of 100,000 Naira, a common income level for many low-income households in Nigeria. In 2021, this family could have allocated their income as follows:
Table 2: Hypothetical Family Budget (2021)
| EXPENSE CATEGORY | 2021 BUDGET (NGN) | PERCENTAGE OF INCOME |
| Food | 30,000 | 30% |
| Rent | 15,000 | 15% |
| Transportation | 10,000 | 10% |
| Education | 10,000 | 10% |
| Healthcare | 5,000 | 5% |
| Utilities | 10,000 | 10% |
| Savings | 20,000 | 20% |
Now, in 2024, due to hyperinflation, this same family faces a drastically different reality:
Table 3: Hypothetical Family Budget (2024)
| EXPENSE CATEGORY | 2024 BUDGET (NGN) | PERCENTAGE OF INCOME |
| Food | 50,000 | 50% |
| Rent | 25,000 | 25% |
| Transportation | 10,000 | 10% |
| Education | 15,000 | 15% |
| Healthcare | 10,000 | 10% |
| Utilities | 15,000 | 15% |
| Savings | -25,000 (Deficit) | -25% |
This hypothetical family is now forced to allocate almost all of their income to basic necessities, leaving them with a substantial deficit and no room for savings. This scenario is a stark reality for millions of low-income earners in Nigeria, highlighting the urgent need for solutions to combat hyperinflation and protect their financial well-being.
Understanding the Target Audience
Low-income earners in Nigeria are particularly vulnerable to the effects of hyperinflation. They often lack access to traditional financial instruments, including bank accounts, which can help to mitigate the effects of inflation. They rely heavily on cash and informal savings mechanisms, making them highly susceptible to the rapid erosion of purchasing power.
USDT: A Potential Hedge Against Inflation
USDT, a stablecoin pegged to the US dollar, offers a potential solution to this problem. By pegging its value to the US dollar, USDT provides a stable store of value, shielding its holders from the volatility of local currencies. This makes it an attractive alternative for those looking to preserve their savings in a hyperinflationary environment.
Savecoins: Bridging the Gap
We, at Savecoins, recognize the urgent need for accessible and secure financial solutions for low-income earners. Our platform is designed to empower this vulnerable demographic by offering a simple and user-friendly way to convert part of their Naira savings into USDT, effectively hedging against the devastating effects of inflation.
The Savecoins Advantage
Savecoins utilizes a decentralized and secure blockchain-based system, offering a secure and transparent platform for managing digital assets. We are constantly working to improve user experience and provide the following features:
Ease of Use: We have designed our platform to be intuitive and user-friendly, even for those with limited digital literacy.
Accessibility: Users can access our platform on their mobile devices or through a web browser, making it easily accessible to a wider audience.
Security: We prioritize the security of user funds, implementing robust security measures to protect against fraud and cyberattacks.
Transparency: We are committed to transparency in all our operations, providing users with clear information about their transactions and account activity.
Case Study: The Adegoke Family
Let’s consider the Adegoke family, living in Lagos with a monthly income of 100,000 Naira. In 2021, they were able to save 20,000 Naira per month, as seen in Table 2. However, in 2025, as shown in Table 3, their savings have been completely wiped out due to hyperinflation, leaving them with a deficit of 25,000 Naira.
If the Adegoke family had used Savecoins to save a portion of their savings in USDT since 2021, their situation would be drastically different.
Let’s assume they saved 10,000 Naira into USDT every month starting in 2021.
Due to a significant increase in the USD to NGN exchange rate of 347.37% from 2021 to 2025, those 10,000 Naira saved each month in USDT would be worth about 44,737 Naira each by 2024.
By 2024, the Adegoke family would have accumulated about 2,147,712 Naira worth of USDT. At the 2024 market value, this is approximately 2,147,712 Naira more than their current savings situation, representing a substantial increase in purchasing power due to the dramatic change in exchange rates.
This example illustrates how Savecoins could have helped the Adegoke family preserve their purchasing power and avoid a substantial financial deficit.
The Impact of Hyperinflation: A Predictive Analysis
The hyperinflationary environment is projected to continue, further eroding the value of the Naira. This trend has far-reaching implications for low-income Nigerians, potentially exacerbating existing financial vulnerabilities and pushing many into deeper poverty.
By utilizing predictive analysis, we can model the potential impact of Savecoins on low-income earners over the next few years:
Scenario 1: No Action Taken
Without adopting solutions like Savecoins, the purchasing power of low-income earners will continue to decline at an alarming rate.
The gap between income and expenses will widen, forcing families to make increasingly difficult choices and further restricting their ability to save.
This scenario could lead to a significant increase in poverty and social unrest, as individuals struggle to meet basic needs.
Scenario 2: Savecoins Adoption
With increased adoption of Savecoins, a substantial portion of low-income earners will have access to a stable store of value, enabling them to protect their savings from inflation.
This could lead to greater financial security, improved access to essential goods and services, and a reduction in poverty.
The long-term economic impact could be significant, fostering a more resilient and equitable economy.
Building a Sustainable Future
For Savecoins to make a lasting impact on the lives of low-income Nigerians, we are building a sustainable model that addresses the unique challenges they face. Here’s how we are doing that:
Bridging the Digital Divide: We invest in initiatives to enhance digital literacy and access to smartphones in low-income communities. This includes partnering with local NGOs and educational institutions to offer training programs, providing subsidized access to mobile devices, and creating user-friendly mobile applications that simplify the user experience. We are exploring partnerships with mobile operators to offer affordable data plans and smartphone subsidies to target users.
Building Trust and Partnerships: We will strengthen our relationships with local banks, mobile operators, and government agencies. These partnerships will help us reach a wider audience, build trust among potential users, and integrate our services into existing financial ecosystems. We are also actively engaging with community leaders and local influencers to build awareness and encourage adoption.
Continuous Improvement: We will continually evolve our platform, introducing features and functionalities that meet the specific needs of low-income users. This includes:
Simplified User Interfaces: We will focus on developing intuitive and user-friendly mobile applications that cater to the needs of users with limited digital literacy.
Educational Content: We will create educational resources and campaigns that demystify financial concepts and help users understand the benefits of using stablecoins like USDT.
Risk Management Tools: We will offer tools and resources to help users mitigate potential risks associated with volatility in the cryptocurrency market.
Conclusion
Hyperinflation in Nigeria presents a grave threat to the financial well-being of low-income earners. We, at Savecoins, are committed to empowering this vulnerable demographic with the tools they need to navigate this challenging economic environment. By providing a stable and accessible way to hedge against inflation, we aim to contribute to greater financial security, enabling individuals to save for their futures and build a more resilient economy.
Success depends on addressing the remaining challenges, building robust partnerships, and continually improving our platform and services. As Nigeria continues to grapple with hyperinflation, Savecoins has the potential to become a vital tool for financial inclusion and empowerment, transforming the lives of millions of Nigerians.
Feature/OPED
How AI Levels the Playing Field for SMEs
By Linda Saunders
Intro: In many small businesses, the owner often starts out as the bookkeeper, the customer-service desk, the IT technician and the person who steps in when a delivery goes wrong. With so many balls up in the air – and such little room for error – one dropped ball can derail the entire day and trigger a chain of problems that’s hard to recover from. Unlike larger companies that have the luxury of spreading the load across dedicated teams and systems, SMEs carry it all on a few shoulders.
South Africa’s SME sector carries significant weight, contributing around 19% of GDP and a third of formal employment, according to the latest available Trade & Industrial Policy Strategies (TIPS) 2024 review. That is causing persistent constraints, including tight margins, erratic demand, high administrative load, and limited internal capacity.
This is not unique to South Africa. Many smaller businesses across the continent still rely on manual processes. It is common to find sales records kept separately from customer notes, or inventory data that is updated only occasionally. The result is slow turnaround times, duplicated effort and a lack of visibility across the business. Given that SMEs have such a huge influence on national economies, accounting for over 90% of all businesses, between 20-40% of GDP in some African countries, and a major source of employment, providing around 80% of jobs, these operational constraints have a broad impact on economies.
What has changed in recent years is that digital tools once seen as the preserve of larger companies have become more attainable for smaller operators. They do not remove the structural challenges SMEs face, but they can ease the load. Better systems do not replace judgement, experience or customer relationships; they simply give small companies more room to work with.
Cloud-based systems, automation and integrated customer-management tools have become more affordable and easier to deploy. They do not remove the structural pressures facing small businesses, but they can ease the operational load and create more space for productive work.
Doing more with the teams SMEs already have
Small teams often end up wearing several hats. One person might take customer calls, update stock records, handle service issues and manage follow-ups. When demand rises, these manual processes become harder to sustain. Local surveys regularly point to this strain, showing that smaller companies spend significant portions of the week on paperwork, compliance and routine administrative tasks – work that adds little value but cannot be ignored.
This is where automation is proving useful. Routine tasks such as onboarding new customers, checking documents, routing queries to the right person, logging interactions and sending follow-ups can now run quietly in the background. In larger companies, whole departments handle this work. In small businesses, the same burden has traditionally fallen on one or two people. When these processes run reliably without constant attention, a business with 10 employees can manage busier periods without rushed outsourcing or slipping service standards.
The point is not to replace staff, but to reduce the operational drag that limits what small teams can deliver. Structured workflows give SMEs a level of steadiness they have rarely had the time or money to build themselves.
Using better data to make better decisions
A second constraint facing SMEs is disorganised information. When customer details are lost in email, sales notes in chat groups, stock figures in spreadsheets and queries in separate systems, decisions depend on whatever information happens to be at hand. Forecasting becomes guesswork, and early warning signs are easy to miss.
Putting all this information in a single place changes the quality of decision-making. When sales, service and stock data can be viewed together, patterns become easier to spot: which products are moving, which customers are becoming less active, where delays tend to occur, and which periods consistently drive higher demand.
Importantly, SMEs do not need corporate analytics teams for this. Modern CRM platforms can organise information automatically and surface basic trends. For retailers preparing for 2026, this can help avoid over – or under – stocking. For service businesses, it can highlight customers who may be at risk of leaving, prompting earlier intervention. In competitive markets, having clearer information is a practical advantage.
Building a foundation before the pressure arrives
Rapid growth can be as destabilising for SMEs as an economic downturn. When orders increase, manual processes quickly reach their limit. Errors are more likely, staff become overwhelmed and the customer experience suffers. Many small businesses only upgrade their systems once these problems appear, by which time the cost, both financial and reputational, is already significant.
Putting basic workflow tools and a unified customer record in place early provides a useful buffer. Tasks follow the same steps every time, reducing inconsistency. Customers reach the right person more quickly. Staff spend less time checking or re-entering information and more time on work that matters. These small operational gains compound over time, especially during busy periods.
This is not about chasing every new technology. It is about avoiding a common pattern in the SME sector: when demand rises, systems buckle, and growth becomes more difficult.
Confidence matters as much as capability
Smaller companies understandably worry about risk when adopting new systems. Data protection, monitoring, and compliance can feel daunting without an IT department. The advantage of modern platforms is that many of these protections, like encryption, audit trails, and event monitoring, are built in. Transparent design also helps SMEs understand how automated decisions are made and how customer data is handled.
This reassurance is important because SMEs should not have to choose between improving their operations and protecting their customers’ information.
2026 will reward readiness
Technology will not replace the qualities that give SMEs their edge: personal service, flexibility, and the ability to respond quickly to customer needs. What it can do is relieve the administrative load that prevents those strengths from being fully used.
SMEs that invest in simple automation and better data practices now will enter 2026 with greater capacity and clearer insight. They won’t be competing with larger companies by matching their resources, but by removing the disadvantages that have traditionally held them back.
In the year ahead, the most competitive businesses will not be the biggest; they’ll be the ones that prepared early for the year ahead.
Linda Saunders is the Country Manager & Senior Director Solution Engineering for Africa at Salesforce
Feature/OPED
Why Africa Requires Homegrown Trade Finance to Boost Economic Integration
By Cyprian Rono
Africa’s quest to trade with itself has never been more urgent. With the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) gaining momentum, governments are working to deepen intra-African commerce. The idea of “One African Market” is no longer aspirational; it is emerging as a strategic pathway for economic growth, job creation, and industrial competitiveness. Yet even as infrastructure and regulatory reforms advance, one fundamental question remains; how will Africa finance its cross-border trade, across markets with diverse currencies, regulations, and standards?
Today, only 15 to 18 percent of Africa’s internal trade happens within the continent, compared to 68 percent in Europe and 59 percent in Asia. Closing this gap is essential if AfCFTA is to deliver prosperity to Africa’s 1.3 billion people.
A major constraint is the continent’s huge trade finance deficit, which exceeds USD 81 billion annually, according to the African Development Bank. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which provide more than 80 percent of the continent’s jobs, are the most affected. Many struggle with insufficient collateral, stringent risk profiling and compliance requirements that mirror international banking standards rather than the realities of African business.
To build integrated value chains, exporters and importers must operate within trusted, predictable, and interconnected financial systems. This requires strong pan-African financial institutions with both local knowledge and continental reach.
Homegrown trade finance is therefore indispensable. Pan-African banks combine deep domestic roots with extensive regional reach, making them the most credible engines for financing trade integration. By retaining financial activity within the continent, homegrown lenders reduce exposure to external shocks and keep liquidity circulating locally. They also strengthen existing regional payment infrastructure such as the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS), developed by the Africa Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and backed by the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat, enabling faster, cheaper and seamless cross-border payments across the continent.
Digital transformation amplifies this advantage. Real-time payments, seamless Know-Your-Customer (KYC) verification, automated credit scoring and consistent service delivery across markets are essential for intra-African trade. Institutions such as Ecobank, operating in 34 African countries with integrated core banking systems, demonstrate how such digital ecosystems can enable continent-wide commerce.
Platforms such as Ecobank’s Omni, Rapidtransfer and RapidCollect, together with digital account-opening services, make it much easier for traders to operate across borders. Rapidtransfer enables instant, secure payments across Ecobank’s 34-country network, reducing delays in regional trade, while RapidCollect gives cross-border enterprises the ability to receive payments from multiple African countries into a single account with real-time confirmation and automated reconciliation. Together, these solutions create an integrated digital ecosystem that lowers friction, accelerates payments, and strengthens intra-African commerce.
Trust, however, remains a significant barrier. Cross-border commerce depends on the confidence that partners will honour contracts, deliver goods as promised, pay on time, and present authentic documentation. Traders often lack reliable information on potential partners, operate under different regulatory regimes, and exchange documents that are difficult to verify across borders. This heightens the risk of fraud, non-payment, and contractual disputes, discouraging businesss from expanding beyond familiar markets.
Technology is closing this trust gap. Artificial Intelligence enables lenders to assess risk using alternative data for SMEs without formal credit histories. Distributed ledger tools make shipping documents, certificates of origin, and inspection reports tamper-proof. In addition, supply-chain visibility platforms enable real-time tracking of goods and cross-border digital KYC ensures that both buyers and sellers are verified before any transaction occurs.
Ecobank’s Single Trade Hub embodies this trust infrastructure by offering a secure digital marketplace where buyers and sellers can trade with confidence, even in markets where no prior relationships exist. The platform’s Trade Intelligence suite provides customers instant access to market data from customs information and product classification tools across 133 countries.
Through its unique features such as the classification of best import/export markets, over 25,000 market and industry reports, customs duty calculators, and local and universal customs classification codes, businesses can accurately assess market opportunities, anticipate trends, reduce compliance risks, and optimise supply chains, ultimately helping them compete and grow in regional and global markets.
SMEs need more than financing. Many operate in cash-heavy cycles where suppliers and logistics providers require upfront payment. Lenders can support these businesses with advisory services, business intelligence, compliance guidance, and platforms for secure partner verification, contract negotiation, and secure settlement of payments. Trade fairs, industry forums, and partnerships with chambers of commerce further build the trust networks needed for cross-border trade.
Ultimately, Africa’s path toward meaningful trade integration begins with financial integration. AfCFTA’s promise will only be realised when enterprises can trade with confidence, knowing that payments will be honoured, partners verified, and disputes resolved. This requires collaboration between banks, regulators, and trade institutions, alongside harmonised financial regulations, interoperable payment systems, and continent-wide verification networks.
Africa can no longer rely on external actors to finance its trade. Its economic transformation depends on strong, trusted, and digitally enabled African financial institutions that understand Africa’s unique risks and opportunities. By building an African-led trade finance ecosystem, the continent can unlock liquidity, reduce dependence on external currencies, empower SMEs, and retain more value locally. Africa’s trade revolution will accelerate when its financing is driven by African institutions, African systems, and African ambition.
Cyprian Rono is the Director of Corporate and Investment Banking for Kenya and EAC at Ecobank Kenya
Feature/OPED
Tax Reform or Financial Exclusion? The Trouble with Mandatory TINs
By Blaise Udunze
It is not only questionable but an aberration that a nation where over 38million Nigerians remain financially excluded, where trust in institutions is fragile, and where citizens are pressured under the weight of rising living costs, the use of Tax Identification Number (TIN) has been specified as the only option for their bank accounts operation from January 1, 2026 by the Federal Government of Nigeria.
In practice, the policy spearheaded by Taiwo Oyedele, Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms, is rooted in the Nigerian Tax Administration Act (NTAA), and the intention can be understood in the areas of improving tax compliance, widening the tax net, and formalizing economic activities. But in practice, the directive risks becoming yet another well-meaning reform that punishes the wrong people, disrupts financial inclusiveness, and potentially destabilises an already stressed economy.
Yes, Nigeria needs tax reforms. Yes, the country must broaden its tax base. And yes, public revenues must increase to address fiscal pressures.
But compelling citizens to obtain TINs as a condition for operating bank accounts is the wrong tool for the right objective.
Below are five core arguments against the directive, and sustainable alternatives that actually strengthen tax compliance without endangering banking access or punishing informal earners.
The Directive Risks Deepening Financial Exclusion
Nigeria still struggles with financial inclusion. According to several official assessments, over 38 million adults remain outside the formal financial system. Many of them operate small, irregular businesses, survive through subsistence earnings, or depend on cash-based livelihoods.
The Federal Government’s compulsory TIN-for-bank-accounts policy is built on the assumption that every banked Nigerian is structured, organised, and tax-ready. This is false.
For instance, the rural market woman with N30,000 in rotating savings, the okada rider who deposits cash once a week, the petty trader using a mobile POS agent account, the retiring pensioner managing a small monthly income, and the migrant worker sends small remittances to their family. These are not tax evaders; they are survivalists.
Most operate bank accounts not because they run formal businesses, but because those accounts are essential to modern financial life: receiving transfers, accessing loans, participating in digital commerce, saving against emergencies, and avoiding the risks of moving cash in insecure environments.
By creating an additional bureaucratic barrier, the directive risks pushing millions back into a cash-dominant shadow economy, precisely the opposite outcome of what Nigeria’s financial-sector reforms are trying to achieve.
Bank Accounts Are Not Proof of Taxable Income
The NTAA clarifies that the TIN requirement applies only to taxable persons, individuals engaged in trade, employment, or income-generating activities.
But herein lies the problem: banks cannot determine who is “taxable” and who is not. Banks only see deposits and withdrawals. They do not audit the source or consistency of income. They are not tax authorities.
A student may run a small online clothing resale gig. A retiree may occasionally rent out farmland.
A dependent may receive cash support from a relative abroad. A job seeker may get intermittent gifts from family.
Who decides which of these scenarios qualifies as taxable? Banks? FIRS? Or will citizens be expected to self-declare under threat of account restrictions?
The result will be confusion, over-compliance, and mass panic with banks indiscriminately demanding TINs from everyone to avoid regulatory penalties.
This not only contradicts the spirit of the law but also exposes ordinary Nigerians to harassment and arbitrary compliance requirements.
The Policy Could Trigger Disruption, Panic Withdrawals, and Cash Hoarding
Whenever Nigerians perceive threats to their access to funds, the natural reaction is withdrawal and hoarding. We saw it during:
– the 2023 Naira redesign crisis,
– the 2016 TSA-bank consolidation tightening, and multiple periods of financial instability.
Telling citizens that bank accounts may face “operational restrictions” if they do not obtain a TIN creates a predictable behavioural response: people will rush to withdraw money.
This would be disastrous for a banking system already pressured by:
– high interest rates,
– inflation eroding deposits,
– rising loan defaults, and
– declining public trust.
Any government policy that unintentionally creates an incentive for citizens to flee the formal banking system is counterproductive.
The TIN Requirement Will Become a Bureaucratic Nightmare
Even if millions of Nigerians want to comply, the system is not ready. Nigeria’s administrative infrastructure does not have the capacity to process tens of millions of TIN registrations within months without:
– long queues,
– delays,
– data mismatches,
– duplicate records, and
– systemic errors.
The National Identity Number (NIN)-SIM registration experience is a painful reminder of what happens when ambitious policy meets weak execution capacity.
– Citizens spent months in overcrowded enrolment centres.
– Millions were blocked from services.
– Data inconsistencies persisted.
– The economy suffered productivity losses.
If Nigeria could not seamlessly synchronise NIN and SIM data, how will it synchronise NIN, BVN, and TIN at a national scale without dislocation?
Forcing TIN Adoption Ignores the Real Problem: Nigeria’s Broken Tax Culture
The Federal Government’s real challenge is not that citizens lack TINs, but that they lack trust in how taxes are used.
A government cannot widen the tax net when:
– tax leakages remain widespread,
– citizens feel services do not match taxation,
– corruption perceptions are high,
– government spending lacks transparency, and
– taxpayers do not feel seen, heard, or valued.
Coercion does not build a tax culture. Engagement does. Policy does not create legitimacy. Accountability does.
If the Federal Government wants Nigerians to freely participate in the tax system, it must earn legitimacy first, not mandate compliance through financial restrictions.
What the Government Should Do Instead: A Smarter Path to Tax Reform
Instead of enforcing a policy that may backfire economically and socially, the Federal Government can adopt four smarter, people-centred alternatives.
– Automatic TIN Issuance Linked to NIN and BVN
Rather than forcing Nigerians to apply manually, the government should:
- auto-generate TINs for all existing BVN/NIN holders,
- send the TINs via SMS, email, and bank alerts,
- allow self-activation only when needed for tax obligations.
This eliminates queues, delays, and confusion.
– Build a Voluntary Tax Compliance Culture Through Transparency and Incentives
Tax morale improves when citizens see value. Government should:
- publish annual audited reports of tax revenue use,
- incentivise compliant taxpayers with benefits (priority access to government grants, credit scoring, etc.),
- simplify tax filings for small businesses.
People comply more when they feel respected, not coerced.
– Target High-Value Tax Evaders, Not Low-Income Account Holders
Nigeria’s real tax leakages come from:
- large corporations shifting profits,
- politically exposed persons,
- illicit financial flows,
- multinational tax avoidance strategies,
- the informal “big money” class operating outside the banking system.
Instead of threatening small depositors, the government should strengthen:
- FIRS intelligence and investigation units,
- inter-agency data integration (CAC, Customs, Immigration),
- beneficial ownership transparency enforcement.
The fight against tax evasion should focus on those hiding billions, not those depositing thousands.
– Strengthen Digital Tax Platforms for Easy Self-Registration and Compliance
If tax registration becomes as easy as opening a social media account, compliance will rise naturally. The government should build:
- a mobile-first tax app,
- simplified online TIN retrieval,
- one-click tax filing for gig workers and small traders.
Digital convenience can achieve what regulatory coercion cannot.
Reform Should Not Punish the Public
No doubt, tax reforms are needed urgently, but they must come with a human face, an intelligent, equitable, and aligned with the realities of ordinary Nigerians.
The TIN-for-bank-accounts policy, while well-intentioned, risks undermining financial inclusion, triggering economic instability, and imposing unnecessary burdens on millions who are not tax evaders but survival-based earners.
Good tax policy is built on trust, not fear. On transparency, not threats. On civic legitimacy, not administrative compulsion.
If the Federal Government truly wants to modernise Nigeria’s tax system, it must focus not on restricting citizens’ access to their own money, but on:
- repairing tax trust,
- digitising compliance,
- targeting the real evaders, and
- making participation easier, not harder.
Financial inclusion took Nigeria decades to build. We cannot afford a policy that carelessly reverses these gains.
A better tax system is possible, but it must start with the people, not with their bank accounts.
Blaise, a journalist and PR professional, writes from Lagos, can be reached via: [email protected]
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