Journal of Social Sciences and Economics
Volume 3, Issue 1, April 2026

Impact of Corporate Income Tax and Value-Added Tax Revenue on Economic Growth in Nigeria: Evidence from an ARDL Bounds Testing Approach

Okpalanwabude, Ifeoma Florence (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
09 Mar 2026

Abstract

Nigeria relies heavily on tax revenues, particularly Corporate Income Tax (CIT) and Value-Added Tax (VAT), to fund public expenditure and drive economic growth. However, persistent debates exist regarding the effectiveness of these taxes in stimulating national output, with some studies reporting positive impacts while others suggest negligible or negative effects. This study employed an Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) framework to examine the impact of corporate income tax revenue and value-added tax revenue on economic growth in Nigeria, controlling for real interest rate and labour force participation. The ARDL bounds testing approach was used to test for long-run cointegration and short-run dynamics among the variables. Where cointegration existed, an error correction model captured both long-run equilibrium and short-run adjustments. Pre-estimation tests included unit root and bounds tests, while post-estimation diagnostics assessed autocorrelation, heteroskedasticity, multicollinearity, and model stability using CUSUM and CUSUMSQ. The findings indicate considerable variability in Nigeria’s macro-fiscal indicators over 1994–2023, with corporate income tax (mean = ₦784.94 billion; SD = ₦1,018.90 billion) and VAT revenue (mean = ₦711.63 billion; SD = ₦927.35 billion) showing high volatility and non-normality (JB = 91.09; 78.64). Unit root tests reveal mixed orders of integration [I(0) and I(1)], validating ARDL use. Bounds testing confirms cointegration (F = 3.66 > 3.49). Long-run results show corporate income tax positively affects growth (β = 0.308, p < 0.01), while VAT has a negative effect (β = –0.00006, p < 0.05). Short-run adjustment occurs at 43%. The error correction term (0.43) suggests a moderate adjustment speed toward equilibrium. In conclusion, improving corporate tax collection and administration can stimulate economic growth, while VAT policies require careful calibration to avoid unintended contractionary effects.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

josse

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Economics, Econometrics & Finance Environmental Science Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice Library & Information Science Social Sciences

Description

The Journal of Social Science and Economics (JOSSE), is a peer-reviewed scientific journal that publishes research findings, conceptual studies, and literature reviews in the multidisciplinary fields of social sciences and economics. This journal provides an academic platform for scholars, ...