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The essential guide to the ideas, trends, people and stories shaping Nigeria and the broader African continent. Subscribe from N5,000/$5.99 monthly.

The New Chapter in Nigeria’s Tax Story #OnSite⚡️⁠
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In June this year, President Tinubu signed Nigeria's most ambitious tax reform, the Tax Reform Acts. It is a complete overhaul that will affect how every Nigerian earns, spends, and invests. The good news is that minimum wage earners remain exempt, and the first ₦800,000 you earn is tax-free, while higher earners face progressive rates up to 25% on earnings above ₦50 million. Martins Eke writes that the reform is a mixed bag for businesses: SMEs get breathing room with the turnover threshold doubling from ₦25 million to ₦50 million for tax exemptions. But big corporations face tighter rules, a flat 30% tax rate and a new 15% minimum effective tax rate for companies earning ₦20 billion or more. Meanwhile, the government is consolidating all federal tax bodies into one super-agency, the Nigeria Revenue Service, promising better coordination but raising concerns about potential overreach. The big question is: can this balancing act work? Nigeria desperately needs more revenue (currently only a 10% tax-to-GDP ratio vs. the African Union's 15% benchmark), but the risk is real. Will this modernization boost growth and fairness, or will tax fatigue and aggressive enforcement scare away investors? ⁠
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Read the full story by liking this post at the link in bio⁠
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📝: Martins Eke (@eke_martins)⁠
📷: Photo Illustration by Ezinne Osueke (@ezinne.o.osueke) / THE REPUBLIC.⁠
🔍: Osione Oseni-Elamah (@osione_e), Yusuf Omotayo (@yusufomotayo), Wale Lawal (@wallelawal); Editors.
Time to pick your fave and tell us why. Take the p Time to pick your fave and tell us why. Take the poll below and drop some gems in the comments.
We’re celebrating something truly special today: We’re celebrating something truly special today: The Republic’s 2024 print magazine run has been named a winner at the @aigadesign 365: AIGA Year in Design Awards!⁠
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This recognition means a lot to us. The AIGA Awards highlight the very best in design worldwide, and this time, there were 348 entries from 18 countries. To have our work chosen from such a competitive, global pool is a profound honour.⁠
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For us, this isn’t just about aesthetics. It’s about proving that independent African media can match the highest global standards of creativity, rigour, and impact. It’s about using design to make ideas accessible, to tell complex African stories with clarity and beauty, and to create journalism that readers want to keep and cherish.⁠
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This win belongs to our brilliant editorial and design teams, and to you, our readers and supporters, who make The Republic possible. Thank you for believing in us, for reading, sharing, subscribing, and keeping this community alive⁠.⁠
⁠
Shop all our print designs by clicking this post at the link in our bio.
7 Books That Will Convince You That Good Men Do Ex 7 Books That Will Convince You That Good Men Do Exist. 📚⁠
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If you'd like to read about men who don't fit the toxic masculinity stereotype for a change, this week’s book recommendations are just for you.⁠
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From the former colonial officer who turns against the empire to care for a tortured native woman to the loving father whose unwavering support encourages his daughter’s intellectual curiosity, the men in the books on this list challenge the prevailing stereotypes about men.⁠
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Have you read any of these books? What books would you recommend? Tell us in the comment section!⁠
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Read the full list by clicking this image at the link in our bio.⁠
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#ReadSomethingAfrican⁠
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📝: Ijapa O (@ijapa_o)⁠
🔍: Peace Onafuye (@yetundeandbooks); Editor
Africa’s AI Path to Health Impact #OnSite⚡️⁠
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In 2021, Ebele Mọgọ wrote a speculative fiction story imagining Osadebe, an AI agent that performed medical procedures, knew patients' favourite songs and books, cracked personalized jokes, and provided emotional support during surgery. It seemed like distant science fiction. By 2024,  America's Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had authorized over 880 AI-powered medical devices, from diagnostic tools to surgical guidance systems. That future is no longer distant; it's here. The question now, Mọgọ writes, is whether Africa can harness this transformation to leapfrog healthcare challenges and build systems that 'can learn, adapt and act—not just to treat illness, but to prevent it altogether.' While the continent faces persistent healthcare challenges, from language barriers to specialist shortages and limited infrastructure, AI could offer solutions that bypass traditional constraints. But success requires more than just adopting technology; it demands building systems designed for African contexts, with African priorities, by African innovators. Can Africa harness AI to create healthcare systems that truly serve its people? The answer may determine whether the continent's next chapter is written by its own innovators or imported from elsewhere. ⁠
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Read the full story, which is only available to our subscribers, by clicking this post at the link in bio: ⁠
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📝: Ebele Mọgọ⁠
📷: Illustration by Charles Owen / THE REPUBLIC.⁠
🔍: Yusuf Omotayo (@yusufomotayo), Wale Lawal (@wallelawal); Editors.
‘Write for Love Before You Consider Writing for ‘Write for Love Before You Consider Writing for Money’ #OnSite⚡⁠
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In today’s First Draft interview, Sue Nyathi discusses how a lack of knowledge about African history motivated her to write her latest novel, ‘An Angel’s Demise’.⁠
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She also reflects on memories of her childhood in Zimbabwe, how reading the Bible brings her joy, the alternative title she would give her debut novel, ‘The Polygamist’, the author she would like to have a chat with and more.⁠
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Read Nyathi’s full interview by clicking this image at the link in our bio.⁠
______________________⁠
⁠
📝: Sue Nyathi (@SueNyathi)⁠
🎨: Sue Nyathi. Illustration by Kevwe Ogini (@dfutureart)⁠
🔍: Ijapa O (@ijapa_o), Peace Onafuye (@yetundeandbooks); Editors
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