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Nigeria delays the new tax law until 2026 due to fears that living costs will increase.

The new tax laws in Nigeria, which include a controversial 5% fuel surcharge that has been causing controversy, won't take effect until the first of January, Finance Minister Wale Edwardun announced on Tuesday. He was trying to ease fears about rising living costs due to widespread economic hardship.

Edun told journalists in Abuja that the surcharge, which targets petrol, diesel and other fossil fuels required a formal government announcement and an official order, signed by the Finance Minister, to be published in National Gazette prior to implementation.

The order will not be released immediately. He said that the government was aware of Nigeria's economic conditions and wouldn't deliberately add to the burden of Nigerians.

Bola Tinubu, who took office in 2023 and has been president since then, has devalued twice the naira and ended subsidies on petrol and electricity as part of his reforms to increase Nigeria's decade long sluggish production. These steps have triggered the worst price-of-living crisis of a generation, but they are not delivering faster growth.

Fuel surcharges are part of the Nigeria Tax Act. The new law, which was signed in June, aims to harmonize and improve taxation rules, as well as increase revenue, through a fiscal overhaul.

Edun, while stressing that the surcharge is not a tax, noted its origins from a 2007 law and described its inclusion in the act as an effort to "harmonise and increase transparency". (Reporting from Abuja by Camillus Eboh; writing by Elisha Gbogbo, editing by Alex Richardson).

(source: Reuters)