The International Monetary Fund has proposed a higher tax policy to solve Nigeriaโs fiscal challenges.
IMF Africa Department Director, Abebe Selassie disclosed this during a press briefing on the Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Economic Outlook on Friday at the ongoing World Bank Group/International Monetary Fund Meeting in Marrakech, Morocco.
DAILY POST reports that the countryโs fiscal challenge had persisted despite fuel subsidy removal and foreign exchange reforms introduced by President Bola Ahmed Tinubuโs government in June.
In 2022, the country spent 96 per cent of its revenue on debt servicing; still in the first six months of 2023, debt serving gulped N2.34 trillion.
As a way out, the IMF director said the Nigerian Government must back the fuel subsidy removal and naira unification policies with an effective policy to ramp up revenue.
โThe exchange rate reforms that the Government did were very, very welcome, trying to unify the rate, similarly the fuel subsidy.
โBut that will not help and will not stick unless you also tighten monetary policy and do something to mobilise more tax revenues. So, a holistic package of reforms is whatโs needed.
โSo, you have a medley of things mainly rooted in the fiscal challenges that Nigeria has faced, not having tax revenues.
โAt the same time, this country has incredible potential, and we have seen reforms moving in the right direction in recent months.
โWhat is needed, we feel, is making the reforms holistic and help reinforce each other. Just as things were not reinforcing each other in the past, I think there is scope to make the reforms reinforce each other,โ the IMF said.