Nigeria’s ongoing fiscal reforms are reshaping how government finances are understood, with officials pushing back against the idea that subsidy removal automatically creates excess cash for spending.
Tanimu Yakubu, Director General of the Budget Office of the Federation, says the narrative of a windfall is misleading. According to him, removing subsidies does not generate new money but corrects long standing price distortions across fuel, foreign exchange, and electricity systems.
The changes expose underlying expenditures formerly absorbed inside the system instead of producing instant liquidity. He clarifies that this change is part of a larger plan to restore financial prudence and boost long-term viability.
The News Chronicle reports that recent policy adjustments, including exchange rate alignment and subsidy removal, have tightened short-term fiscal conditions while laying the groundwork for more transparent public finance management.
Yakubu also drew attention to structural problems inside Nigeria’s fiscal structure whereby income is distributed across levels of government but significant financial responsibilities stay concentrated at the federal level. He pointed out that this imbalance still negatively affects the general financial stability.
One important change mentioned is Executive Order 9, which seeks to stop money from leaking out by making stricter rules for remittances and accountability throughout government departments.
Officials maintain that Nigeria’s fiscal challenge is less about low revenue and more about incomplete capture and systemic leakages. The current reforms are designed to close those gaps and reposition the economy for sustainable growth.

