
A US Tax With Big Consequences For Africa
US President Donald Trump is proposing a 3.5% tax on remittances by non-citizens as part of the Republican tax bill currently working through the Senate. On today's episode of the Next Africa podcast we look at why this proposal could have major repercussions for African economies, particularly Nigeria, one of the world's biggest recipients of remittances. Jennifer Zabasajja is joined by Dr Lydiah Kemunto Bosire, the founder of New York based 8B Education Investments, and hears how this makes America less attractive to Africa's brightest students, and Nigeria Bureau Chief Anthony Osae Brown explains how reliant Nigeria is on remittances especially ofF the back of USAID cuts. For more stories from the region, subscribe to the Next Africa newsletter here
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
31 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Wholesale Inflation Undershot Forecasts in May
Wholesale inflation undershot expectations last month, according to a Labor Department report that came a day after a weaker-than-forecast reading on consumer prices. Producer prices rose 0.1% in May from April, below the 0.2% rise economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had expected. Over the past 12 months, the producer-price index rose 2.6%, slightly above April's revised figure.

Wall Street Journal
35 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
RH Swings to Surprise Profit Despite Tariff Pressures
RH swung to a profit in its fiscal first quarter despite the impact of tariffs on spending and the shakiest housing market in decades, pushing its shares higher after hours. The furniture retailer posted a profit of $8 million, or 40 cents a share, for the quarter ended May 3. That stacks against a loss of $3.6 million, or 20 cents a share, in the comparable quarter a year earlier. Analysts polled by FactSet had been expecting another loss.


CNN
37 minutes ago
- CNN
Voice of America brings back Farsi-speaking staff amid Israel-Iran conflict
Several dozen sidelined Voice of America staffers have suddenly been called back to work as the Israel-Iran conflict escalates. It is a dramatic turn of events for the American government-funded broadcasting system that was shut down by the Trump administration in March. Steve Herman, who has been VOA's chief national correspondent since 2022, said the broadcaster specifically brought back Farsi language speakers who have been on paid administrative leave. The move suggests that the US government wants to bolster its programming into Iran. Before the cutbacks were instituted in March, VOA said that it produced four-plus hours a day of 'Persian-language programming to Iran.' The VOA website said the content 'confronts the disinformation and censorship efforts of the Iranian regime and enhances U.S. efforts to speak directly to the Iranian people and the global Persian-speaking diaspora.' It is unclear how much content VOA has been beaming into Iran in recent weeks. The broadcaster's VOA Farsi channel on YouTube showed eight new videos since Israel struck inside Iran early Friday. Staffers from some other VOA language services have also been called back to work. Brett Bruen, president of the consulting firm Global Situation Room, reacted to Herman's X post about the news by tweeting to Kari Lake, the Trump loyalist who has been tasked with gutting VOA. 'Turns out not having a channel to communicate with the Iranian people was a pretty bad idea, @KariLake,' Bruen wrote. A spokesperson for Lake did not immediately respond to CNN's request for comment. Patsy Widakuswara, one of the sidelined journalists who is suing the Trump administration to salvage the broadcaster, told CNN on Friday that 'VOA's role in providing independent, factual and authoritative news has been proven throughout countless times of crisis. But after months off the air, we've already lost a lot of audience and credibility. They should bring us all back so we can respond to breaking news in all parts of the world.'