Look at these uneducated, lazy, staying in Mikhukhu, never travel, HIV+, South africans that are in Korea 😂😂, with legal papers, working there and making Korea great by mostly teaching them English, Some are Nurses, Engineers.
#FWC2026
There is an epidemic of illiteracy in Nigeria. Shocking that adults just come online to expose themselves.
10 Downing Street houses the PM’s residence, government’s offices & the guest area .PO referenced the PM’s residence which is a flat of two bedrooms & a study room.
After the world is done raving about 🇨🇩 DR. Congo’s grand arrival and fashion look for the World Cup, please also take the time to educate yourselves about our issues and amplify our voices. DR. Congo is currently undergoing a genocide and one of its worst Ebola outbreaks.
🤣🤣🤣 see ehn anyone believes this BS ehn
Good luck
The simple thing is that your government would impose taxes on fuel and telcos
So all the long english down there is to twist your head and think the government is working
QUICK NOTE
I am glad Nigerians are engaged in discussions about the management of the economy, both fiscal and monetary. This matters even more as we head towards the polls, dealing with the gains, pains and fears of the reforms implemented thus far.
The post below is useful, but it also shows why economic issues require nuance beyond headlines. See...., the claim that the #IMF asked Nigeria to impose fuel and telecom taxes is substantially true, but incompletely framed. That framing may reflect the trust deficit that has built up over time with such statements, but we should not deepen it. We should help reduce it.
The IMF did not simply say “impose fuel and telecom taxes now.” In its 2026 Article IV Staff Report, it said Nigeria may need further tax policy changes over the medium term, including increasing VAT, extending VAT to fuel products, rationalising tax exemptions, and introducing telecom excises.
But it also added an important caveat. The timing of such reforms must consider poverty and food insecurity, and ensure that the cash transfer system is in place and funded.
Paragraph 20, Fiscal Policy, page 17, states:
“Further tax policy changes will likely be needed, such as increasing the VAT rate, extending VAT to fuel products, rationalising tax expenditures … and introducing telecom excises, to complement administrative gains. The timing of reforms must consider the poverty and food insecurity situation and ensure that the cash transfer system is in place and funded.”
See: https://t.co/bob1Omdcdb
The Executive Board summary also notes that additional tax policy measures may be needed over the medium term, including to fund a scaled-up cash transfer programme for vulnerable households.
Nigeria’s Executive Director also made the balancing point clear. The authorities are open to further tax policy adjustments, including possible VAT increases, VAT on fuel products, and telecom excises, but only when the cash transfer system is fully funded and operational, so the burden does not fall disproportionately on the vulnerable.
See: https://t.co/xPjiuUoL9j via @proshare
So, to the good people at @NigeriaStories, the “breaking news” version is not false. Perhaps, due to the editorial summary, it unwittingly overstated the message by omitting the IMF’s caveats on timing, sequencing, and social protection.
Without holding brief for the @IMFNews or the @NigeriaGov, and without prejudice to the wider debate on whether taxes are the right solution, the more accurate framing is this:
The IMF recommends that Nigeria consider further medium-term revenue measures, including extending VAT to fuel products and introducing telecom excises, but says timing should depend on poverty conditions and the readiness of funded cash-transfer protections.
My regards.
Everytime I go on space and tell Nigerians "we do not have an economic policy", it sound crazy to their ears.
IMF knows the policies will ruin the country, national advisers all know.
Like I say again "the worst thing that can happen to a nation is for it to be ruled by a puppet"
JUST IN: 🇳🇬 IMF has told the Nigerian government to impose fuel and telecom taxes on Nigerians, to increase government revenue.
Nigeria is currently the number 1 country with the lowest quality of life.
Nigeria could not rescue an Army General and his wife. Yet, within 24 hours, his body was recovered so he could be buried according to Muslim rites, while officials repeated the cause of death supplied by the terrorists themselves. And we're expected to believe this without question?
@jaggededge96539@Olatoun_ Well call him what you want to call him .
Just so you know …. Sure to like the country when insecurity takes the west totally.
And how one gets to dictate who should be your leader .
Lol 😂
Nigerian government seems more focused on IMF and World Bank directives than on how those policies affect its own citizens…
this is what they like
we should probably prepare for fuel prices around ₦1,500–₦1,600 and data costs ₦1,200 for just 500MB.