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Presidency: ‘Non-oil Revenue Rose 40% In 8 Months

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Presidency: 'Non-oil Revenue Rose 40% In 8 Months
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The Presidency has said that non-oil revenues rose by 40.05 per cent, from N14.6 trillion to N20.59 trillion from January to August 2025… ..Read Full Article.. .

The government said the rise is an indication that the country is firmly on track to meet its annual non-oil revenue target.

Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser on Information and Strategy to President Bola Tinubu, in a statement titled ‘Nigeria’s Non-oil Revenues Power Strongest Fiscal Performance In Recent History,’ cited new figures showing a sharp rise in collections driven by fiscal reforms, tax compliance, and digitised revenue systems.

According to data released for January to August 2025, non-oil revenues rose to N20.59 trillion, up 40.5 per cent from the N14.6 trillion recorded during the same period in 2024.

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According to the statement, this represents the strongest fiscal performance in Nigeria’s recent history.

“Nigeria’s fiscal foundations are being reshaped. For the first time in decades, oil is no longer the dominant driver of government revenue,” it read.

Onanuga attributed the increase to structural reforms, including improved enforcement, Customs automation, and digital tax filings, adding that “the task ahead is to ensure these gains are felt in better schools, hospitals, roads, and jobs.”

Of the total collections, non-oil revenues now account for three out of every four naira, with N15.69tn coming from non-oil sources. It said Customs alone collected N3.68tn in the first half of 2025, N390bn above target, reflecting what it called “systemic changes, not one-off windfalls.”

While inflation and exchange rate adjustments have contributed to revenue uplift, the presidency says the gains are primarily reform-led. President Tinubu, who addressed a delegation of the Buhari Organisation at the State House on Sunday, pointed to the revenue growth as evidence of improving public finance and noted that the Federal Government was no longer borrowing from local banks, easing pressure on the domestic credit market.

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The Presidency also highlighted a ripple effect at the sub-national level. For the first time, monthly allocations to Nigeria’s 36 states and 774 Local Governments crossed N2tn in July, driven by increased Federation Account disbursements.

Officials said the improved fiscal space allows states to boost spending on infrastructure, agriculture, and social services, aligning with Tinubu’s inclusive growth agenda. “Resources are being directed closer to the people,” the statement read, although it added that current revenue performance still falls short of the President’s ambitions for higher spending on education, healthcare, and infrastructure.

Despite the positive outlook, oil-related revenues remain under pressure due to slumping crude prices and unmet production targets. The Presidency said this had affected overall revenue performance but did not alter the trajectory of non-oil progress.

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Final year-end validation of fiscal targets will be provided by the Budget Office, the statement noted. “Revenues are rising, the base is broadening, and reforms are working.

The priority is translating these numbers into real relief for citizens by putting food on the table, creating jobs for young people,and..  Read . .More —

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