Tag: LCCI

  • Nigeria Can Achieve 2026 Economic Targets Through Targeted Tax Reforms

    Nigeria Can Achieve 2026 Economic Targets Through Targeted Tax Reforms

    Nigeria Can Achieve 2026 Economic Targets Through Targeted Tax Reforms

    In an update published by The Nigerian Observer, the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) said Nigeria can meet its 2026 growth targets if the government sustains its reform trajectory. The Chamber emphasized that tax harmonization and the removal of multiple levies on manufacturers are critical for boosting industrial output, competitiveness, and job creation.

    LCCI’s assessment comes amid a broader push for fiscal discipline. The group said recent reforms have been painful but are beginning to attract investor interest. It warned, however, that high costs of doing business—especially energy and logistics—must be addressed so that reform gains are not eroded.

    The Guardian validated the position, quoting an LCCI executive who argued for a tax system that encourages production rather than consumption. ThisDay also reported that business leaders are cautiously optimistic, particularly about the second half of 2026 if policy consistency holds.

    Echotitbits take: LCCI is acting as a constructive critic. Tax harmonization is pivotal because nuisance levies across state and local levels remain a deterrent for SMEs. Reform credibility will be judged by implementation—not press conferences.

    Source: StateHouse— https://statehouse.gov.ng/2026-marks-the-beginning-of-a-more-robust-phase-of-economic-growth/ (2026-01-23)

    Photo Credit: StateHouse

  • Nigeria posts ₦6.69tr Q3 trade surplus as exports stay ahead of imports

    Nigeria posts ₦6.69tr Q3 trade surplus as exports stay ahead of imports

    2025-12-15 08:00:00

    According to The Punch, Nigeria recorded a ₦6.69 trillion trade surplus in Q3 2025, with exports of about ₦22.81tn outweighing imports of about ₦16.12tn, continuing a run of positive trade balances.

    Punch quotes analysts attributing the performance to FX-market reforms, liberalisation and currency adjustments that improved export competitiveness while making some imports more costly.

    The report notes crude oil remained the dominant export, while stakeholders called for policy consistency and deeper non-oil export expansion to sustain gains.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: A sustained surplus can ease external financing pressure, but it matters what’s driving it—higher export value-add or simply weaker import demand. Watch non-oil export momentum, crude output stability, and how FX policy affects manufacturers’ input costs.

    Source: The Guardian Nigeria News — December 12, 2025

    Photo credit/source: The Guardian Nigeria News

    The Guardian Nigeria News https://guardian.ng/business-services/nigeria-records-trade-surplus-of-n6-9tr-in-q2-2024-nbs/ December 12, 2025