World Bank Metrics Show Nigeria’s Poorest Are Still Within the Tax Net
World Bank Metrics Show Nigeria’s Poorest Are Still Within the Tax Net

Tax debates become distorted when administrative benchmarks are presented as indicators of decent living. This concern is evident in Nigeria’s ₦800,000 annual tax exemption, which is being promoted as relief for low-income earners, despite the fact that the amount falls well below any reasonable standard of economic security.
Measured against global and basic domestic cost-of-living realities, an annual income of ₦800,000 places an individual deep within extreme poverty. Framing such a threshold as protection risks lowering our definition of poverty to the point where mere survival is treated as financial stability, rather than a condition that requires urgent policy attention.
According to the World Bank’s global poverty measurement framework, poverty is assessed using consumption-based thresholds. When these benchmarks are converted into naira—using an approximate exchange rate of ₦1,450 to one US dollar—they provide useful context for discussion, even if they are not perfect representations of local purchasing power.
* **Extreme poverty (around $3 per day):**
This equals roughly ₦4,350 daily, about ₦130,500 monthly, and approximately ₦1.59 million annually per person.
Lower-middle-income poverty line (about $4.20 per day):
This translates to roughly ₦6,090 per day, ₦182,700 per month, and about ₦2.22 million per year.
Upper-middle-income poverty line (around $8.30 per day):
This is equivalent to about ₦12,035 daily, ₦361,050 monthly, and roughly ₦4.39 million annually.
These figures are estimates, as the World Bank’s poverty lines are defined using purchasing power parity (PPP), not market exchange rates. While direct naira conversions are helpful for policy conversations, they cannot fully capture local realities, especially in an environment marked by high inflation and currency instability.
What remains clear, however, is that portraying ₦800,000 as a meaningful tax shield misrepresents the lived experience of millions and risks entrenching deprivation rather than confronting it.
TRENDING SONGS
Sanwo-Olu Tours Massive Tolu Education Hub Set to Transform Learning for 20,000 Lagos Students
Ghana Police Arrest 11 Nigerians in Tamale Crackdown on Drugs, Cybercrime
Malami Breaks Silence on INEC–ADC Dispute, Urges Calm Amid Political Tensions
£746m Nigeria–UK Deal Sparks Debate Over Ajaokuta Steel’s Future
FG Kicks Off 56km Ekiti–Osun Link Road to Boost Regional Trade
Tinubu Condemns Plateau and Kaduna Attacks, Calls for Urgent Action Against Violence
Tonto Dikeh Opens Up on Dark Past: From Cult Involvement to Spiritual Renewal
Alleged Truck Tampering Lands Lagos Man in Court Over Theft Claims
Senegal Tightens Anti-LGBTQ Laws, Doubles Prison Terms Amid Rights Concerns
Infantino Watches Iran Friendly Amid World Cup Venue Uncertainty
Share this post with your friends on ![]()
