Posted by Samuel on Mon 22nd Dec, 2025 - tori.ng
According to Vanguard, the billionaire industrialist said exporting the product allows his company to avoid several taxes that significantly raise production costs at home.
Aliko Dangote, President of the Dangote Group, has attributed the higher cost of his company’s cement in Nigeria to steep taxes and heavy regulatory burdens, making it more expensive than in international markets.
Dangote said the price difference was largely due to multiple levies and charges imposed on local production.
According to Vanguard, the billionaire industrialist said exporting the product allows his company to avoid several taxes that significantly raise production costs at home.
He said the cumulative effect of taxes, fees and regulatory requirements within Nigeria adds substantially to the final retail price of cement.
He said: “When you look at my invoice, the cement I export is cheaper than the one I’m selling domestically, because that’s how exports work. In export I’m saving a lot of money, I’m not paying 30% income tax, I’m not paying 2%, education, I’m not paying 1% health, I’m not paying 7.5% VAT, and I’m not paying 10% withholding tax.
“So when you reduce all these taxes, I can afford to go and compete with the international market, with the likes of Turkey, Russia, and China.”
The billionaire industrialist has consistently stressed local manufacturing as a means of achieving economic self-sufficiency.