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Zacch Adedeji and the Quiet Architecture of Nigeria’s Tax Reforms, by Zekeri Idakwo Laruba

Adedeji embodies a rare alignment between vision and execution. In a reform space historically weakened by fragmentation, that alignment may prove to be the most consequential reform of all. ‎

Tinubunomics and the Arithmetic of Illusion, by Tanimu Yakubu

A striking feature of Nigeria's current economic debate is the enthusiasm with which huge numbers are circulated—and the casualness with which they are assembled.

WAEC CBT Exams: A Laudable Initiative, But Wait… by Lawal Dahiru Mamman

The Senior Secondary School Certificate exam, conducted by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), is held in Ghana, Sierra Leone, Liberia, The Gambia, and Nigeria.

What a Journey to Katsina Taught Me About Power and Peace, By Haroon Aremu

What a Journey to Katsina Taught Me About Power and Peace By Haroon Aremu The phone rang at an hour when silence still owned the world. My chest tightened as our team lead’s voice came through—brief, deliberate, almost cryptic. We were to depart for Katsina the...

Bridging the Gaps in Budget Implementation, by Tunde Rahman

To state that there are gaps in the implementation of the 2024 and 2025 budgets is actually stating the obvious.

“No Gree…” Here for Good, By Tunde Akanni

“No Gree…” Here for Good Tunde Akanni “Like play…”, as they say, Dangote emerges the Man of the Year 2025! A consumerist perspective, you may say. But who could have imagined that the 2024 Gen Zs’ “no gree for anybody” slogan would get a lease of...