A rejoinder to ‘Bola’s Tax’: When ‘simple logic’ becomes simple misdirection, by Tanimu Yakubu

8 Jan 2026

The essay you circulated is rhetorically powerful, but its “simplicity” is achieved by subtracting the very provisions that determine the outcome. That is not clarity; it is selective accounting.

Let’s dismantle the argument on its own terms calmly, sequentially, and with arithmetic that actually follows the law.

1) The core confusion: pension and health insurance are not taxes—they are deductible contributions
A tax is a compulsory payment to government for general public purposes with no direct ownership claim by the payer.

A pension contribution is a deferred wage placed in a worker’s Retirement Savings Account—owned by the worker, regulated by law, and paid out to the worker later. Under Nigeria’s contributory pension framework, the employee contribution is commonly 8% (with an employer minimum contribution alongside it).

Likewise, national health insurance contributions/premiums are risk-pooling payments for defined health coverage, not a general revenue levy; and (crucially) they are among the items treated as deductions in personal income tax computations.

So when someone frames pension/health insurance as “proof the poor are being taxed,” they are committing a category error:

2) The decisive arithmetic the essay avoids: the ₦800,000 tax-free threshold
Under the new regime described in multiple reputable summaries, the first ₦800,000 of annual income is taxed at 0%.

That is not a footnote. That is the hinge.
Now apply it to “Joseph”:
Monthly income: ₦75,000

If the next band is taxed at 15% (as these summaries indicate), then Joseph’s gross annual PIT exposure is:

Now add pension:
If Joseph contributes pension at 8% (even using the essay’s own assumption), that is:

3) The poverty-line move: a PPP concept misused as a nominal naira salary cut-off.
The essay claims a World Bank “poverty line” of $4.20/day and then converts it into a naira monthly salary figure using a simple exchange conversion to get “₦190,000 per month.”
But the World Bank’s $4.20 line is reported in PPP terms (international dollars), not a naira-at-market-exchange salary threshold you can convert with casual FX math.

So the statement “everyone earning below ₦190,000/month is poor” is not an “irrefutable fact.” It is a conversion shortcut that swaps a technical welfare metric for a political talking point.
Even more: the World Bank updated global poverty lines in 2025 (with new PPP bases), which reinforces that these lines are statistical constructs, not the kind of direct nominal wage threshold the essay pretends they are.
4) “Widen the tax base” does not logically mean “tax the poor”

The essay’s claim is:
“The rich are already taxed, so widening must reach downward.”
That is a false syllogism.
“Widening the tax base” can mean (among other things):

So “widening” does not necessarily mean “drag subsistence wages into the net.” It often means: make the system catch who already should be paying.
5) The emotional overload: corruption lists are not an argument against the structure of a tax schedule
The essay spends pages listing possible misuses of public funds (A–Z). Some may be legitimate governance concerns, but they do not prove the specific claim being sold: “This tax takes money from the poor.”

If your target is accountability, the rational conclusion is not “therefore don’t tax.” The rational conclusion is:

The essay flips that logic on its head by implying that lenders fear Nigerians paying taxes because taxes would empower citizens. That is not an argument; it is a narrative device.
Meanwhile, Nigeria’s borrowing constraints are real, and a reform agenda that reduces debt-dependence is not “indifference”; it is sovereignty through solvency.

Proof-by-proof: what the essay is doing (and why it misleads)
Deception 1: Re-labelling deductions as “taxes”

Deception 4: False dilemma

The bottom line
If you want to disagree “most vehemently and logically,” this is the clean core:

  1. The new structure explicitly shields low incomes via a large zero-rated band.
  2. Pension and health insurance deductions are welfare design features, not stealth taxation.
  3. The essay’s outrage depends on omitting the very thresholds and concepts (PPP) that make its conclusion collapse.

Yakubu is the Director-General, Budget Office of the Federation