The Federal Government has inaugurated the National Tax Policy Implementation Committee (NTPIC), a move widely seen as an effort to ensure a more predictable, investor-sensitive rollout of the newly enacted capital-gains-tax (CGT) provisions.
The decision follows months of technical consultations with major capital-market institutions including the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) as policymakers confront the need to balance fiscal reforms with market stability. Officials say the engagements were essential to understanding how taxes, if implemented abruptly, could distort liquidity, weaken price discovery, and hinder long-term capital formation.
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The committee is chaired by tax and fiscal-policy expert Joseph Tegbe, who has been mandated to guide the implementation process with an emphasis on clarity, investor protection, and coherence across regulatory agencies. His team will develop transparent guidelines, lead broad stakeholder consultations, and craft an execution roadmap designed to prevent market disruptions and bolster investor confidence.
Tegbe, speaking at the inauguration, assured the market that the government would not pursue reforms that impede business activity or investment flows.
“Implementation of the new tax laws will be fair, transparent and humane. We will not roll out these policies in a way that cripples businesses or investors. Stakeholder engagement will be central to this process,” he said.
His remarks reinforce what has been a growing sentiment within the capital market: that while Nigeria needs to modernise its tax ecosystem, reforms must be sequenced carefully especially at a time when the country is seeking deeper pools of domestic and foreign capital.
NGX Group GMD/CEO Temi Popoola welcomed the government’s approach, noting that the exchange, alongside the SEC, has consistently pushed for data-driven reforms that preserve market depth.
“We support the modernisation of Nigeria’s tax system, but reforms of this scale must be carefully calibrated to protect liquidity, sustain participation and maintain competitiveness,” he said.
According to Popoola, global competitiveness particularly for emerging markets depends not just on policy intent but on the precision of execution, especially when reforms intersect directly with market mechanics.
Momentum around the CGT conversations intensified after the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, visited the NGX Group. During the visit, operators highlighted potential unintended consequences of a rushed implementation, including weakened sentiment, reduced trading volumes, and a temporary withdrawal of foreign portfolio inflows.
Market analysts say the inauguration of the NTPIC is a positive signal to investors, suggesting that the government is committed to anchoring fiscal reforms in evidence, consultation, and coordinated implementation rather than speed.
Both the SEC and NGX Group have pledged continued collaboration with the committee to ensure that the eventual CGT rollout strengthens confidence, broadens participation, and aligns with Nigeria’s long-term capital-market development goals.









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