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Too Many Taxes, Too Little Mercy: The Crisis Facing Nigeria’s Small Businesses -By Abdulazeez Toheeb Olawale

Businesses shut down, jobs are lost, and families lose their source of income. Young people, unable to find work or sustain enterprises, grow disillusioned. Prices rise as business owners transfer costs to consumers. Others retreat into the informal economy, weakening the tax base and defeating the purpose of aggressive taxation.

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Tax Law Picture

Across Nigeria, small business owners wake up every morning not with hope, but with fear. Fear of another levy. Fear of another demand notice. Fear of another official—or impostor—showing up with a receipt book and a threat to seal their shop.

Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) are widely acknowledged as the backbone of Nigeria’s economy. They employ millions, absorb young graduates, and keep families afloat in communities where government presence is barely felt. Yet, in a painful contradiction, these same businesses are being crushed by a taxation system that shows little mercy and even less coordination.

This is not an argument against taxation. Tax is essential for governance. The real problem is multiple taxation—the layering of taxes, levies, fees, and charges by different tiers of government, often without clarity, consistency, or legal backing.

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A System That Punishes Survival

For many SMEs, the list of payments never ends. Federal taxes are followed by state levies, which are then compounded by local government charges. Beyond these come “environmental fees,” “development levies,” signage permits, market dues, and informal collections enforced by agents who operate with intimidation rather than law.

For a small trader, a tailor, a food vendor, a printer, or a startup founder, taxation has become less about civic duty and more about endurance. Many pay simply to avoid harassment—not because they understand what they are paying for.

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This system does not encourage compliance. It encourages despair.

When Enforcement Becomes Harassment

Perhaps the most painful aspect of multiple taxation is not even the amount paid, but the manner of collection. Reports abound of shops sealed without notice, goods seized arbitrarily, and business owners humiliated in the name of revenue generation.

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Tax collection has, in many places, taken on the character of extortion. Agents are given targets, commissions, or unofficial mandates, and SMEs become the easiest victims. In such an environment, trust between citizens and the state erodes rapidly.

A government that treats its small businesses as enemies cannot expect them to thrive—or even survive.

The Economic Cost We All Pay

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The consequences of this crisis extend far beyond individual entrepreneurs.

Businesses shut down, jobs are lost, and families lose their source of income. Young people, unable to find work or sustain enterprises, grow disillusioned. Prices rise as business owners transfer costs to consumers. Others retreat into the informal economy, weakening the tax base and defeating the purpose of aggressive taxation.

In the end, everyone loses.

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It is a cruel irony that in the quest to raise revenue, government policies are quietly destroying the very sector capable of expanding that revenue sustainably.

A Nation Built on Hustle, Undermined by Policy

Nigeria is a country of resilience. In spite of unreliable electricity, poor infrastructure, inflation, and insecurity, Nigerians still build businesses from nothing. They innovate, adapt, and endure.

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But resilience should not be mistaken for invincibility.

No amount of hard work can survive a system that taxes effort without offering protection, stability, or fairness in return. When government policies punish productivity, the message is clear: survival is no longer guaranteed.

What Must Be Done

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The solution is neither radical nor impossible. What is needed is political will.

Taxation across all levels of government must be harmonised. Approved tax lists must be enforced strictly. Illegal levies and unauthorised collectors must be eliminated. Digital systems should replace human discretion that breeds abuse. SMEs deserve tax reliefs, incentives, and a predictable environment in which to plan and grow.

Most importantly, government must begin to see small businesses not as easy revenue targets, but as partners in national development.

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Conclusion: Mercy Is an Economic Policy Too

An economy cannot grow by bleeding its smallest contributors. Nigeria cannot tax its way to prosperity by suffocating the very businesses that create jobs, reduce poverty, and sustain communities.

Too many taxes, applied without mercy or coordination, are turning entrepreneurship into a gamble and survival into a daily struggle.

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If Nigeria truly wants growth, stability, and shared prosperity, it must first stop punishing those who are trying—against all odds—to build something meaningful.
Because when small businesses collapse, the nation bleeds quietly… and deeply.

Nigeria must decide what it truly wants: a productive economy or a population punished for trying to survive. Small businesses cannot continue to carry the weight of government inefficiency on their fragile shoulders. When the state shows no mercy to its hustlers, it kills innovation, destroys jobs, and deepens poverty. An economy that bleeds its smallest contributors will eventually collapse under its own injustice. This is no longer just a tax problem, it is a moral test, and Nigeria is running out of time to pass it.

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