Nigeria pauses controversial expatriate employment levy |
Nigeria has paused a controversial annual levy that would require businesses employing expatriates to pay $15,000 (£12,000) for a director and $10,000 (£8,000) for other workers. President Bola Tinubu imposed the tax over a week ago, but it was met with widespread condemnation. The Ministry of Interior said on the X social media platform that the levy would be paused for "dialogue among stakeholders." The ministry explained the tax was intended to "discourage abuse" of the expatriate quota. It said it hoped the levy would create "employment opportunities for Nigerians while closing wage gaps between expatriates and local workers." Dele Kelvin Oye, national president of the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines, and Agriculture (NACCIMA), said he welcomed the pause. Foreign investors would be discouraged from investing in Nigeria, a body for manufacturers in the West African nation had warned. The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria stated that the levy was an "unwarranted and unprecedented addition to the cost of doing business" and was perceived as a punishment imposed on foreign investors. Manufacturers argued that the levy would deter multinational companies from investing in Nigeria and setting up regional headquarters in the West African country. |
|