February 15, 2019

50% fee cut to encourage 34m SMEs to formalise – Lady Azinge

The Acting Registrar General of the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Lady Azuka Azinge, has said that the Federal Government reviewed the fee for business registration downward by 50 per cent to encourage Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to formalise their businesses. She said this when the management of Daily Trust Newspaper visited her in the CAC headquarters in Abuja yesterday. Represented by the Commission’s Director of Registry, Mr  Abdul Hakeem Mohammed, Lady Azinge said the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) estimated that about 34 million SMEs operate in the informal sector of the economy and the fee reduction was targeted at enrolling them into the formal sector of the economy. She said the reduction, which was a part of the Commission’s Business Incentive Strategy (BIS), brought down the fee for business registration from N10, 000 to N5,000 to encourage more SMEs to give their businesses formal identities. The CAC boss said the incentive was meant to last for the last quarter of 2018 but popular demand led to an extension to March 31, 2019. She urged SMEs that are yet to take advantage of the incentive window to register their business names before the deadline. The Head of Public Affairs Department of CAC, Mr. Godfrey Ike, commended Daily Trust for being professional and setting the pace for journalism practice in Nigeria.     Source: Daily Trust

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Appointment of Banks by FIRS as Collecting Agents for Recovery of Alleged Tax Liabilities

The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) recently issued Letters of Substitution, pursuant to Section 49 of the Companies Income Tax Act (CITA) 2004 and Section 31 of the Federal Inland Revenue Service Establishment Act (FIRSEA) 2007, to banks in Nigeria (“the Substitution Banks” or “SBs”), appointing them as tax collecting agents for certain listed customers (“affected companies”) maintaining bank accounts with such banks. The FIRS, in the said Letters of Substitution, alleges that the affected companies have breached their tax obligations by failing to pay tax to the FIRS, as and when due, and provided the SBs with an indication of a specific amount owed by each said company. The SBs were directed to set aside the indicated sums and pay such over to the FIRS in full or partial payment of the alleged tax debt. Furthermore, the FIRS demanded that the banks should not execute any mandates on those accounts without its prior approval. A number of taxpayers concerning whom similar Letters of Substitution were issued by the FIRS in 2018, suffered the consequence of being unable to access their bank accounts for paying salaries or making routine transactions until the “freeze” order imposed by the FIRS was lifted. Indeed, the first time that many affected companies knew of the existence of these Letters of Substitution was typically when bank mandates were rejected by their bankers. The FIRS also demanded the SBs to provide the companies’ (and their subsidiaries’) detailed bank statements and financial records, and records of all principal officers of the companies. The FIRS based its actions on the provisions of Sections 28 and 29 of the FIRSEA. Background Sections 31 of the FIRSEA and Section 49 of CITA allow the FIRS to appoint any person, by notice in writing, to be an agent of a taxpayer, where such person is in custody of any money belonging (or due) to the taxpayer. The appointed agent may be required by such notice to pay any tax “payable” by the taxpayer to the FIRS out of the taxpayer’s money in his custody. The FIRSEA and CITA provide that any appointment made by the FIRS under these sections of the law would be “subject to the provisions of the tax legislation with respect to objections and appeals”. Section 69 of CITA allows a taxpayer to object to a disputed assessment within thirty (30) days from the date of service of the notice of assessment. Section 77(3) of CITA further provides that the collection of tax, in any case where notice of an objection or appeal has been given by a taxpayer, shall remain in abeyance until such objection or appeal is determined. Nothing in the CITA or FIRSEA authorises the FIRS to impose a freeze order on a taxpayer’s bank account beyond the amount of tax proven to be due and payable by that taxpayer. The requirement directed to banks not to honour mandates from taxpayers over and above the tax amount supposedly proven by FIRS to be due and payable is without foundation and goes too far. Matters Arising It is not clear from the provisions of the FIRSEA or CITA relied upon by the FIRS that its power of substitution is expected to be exercised without notice to the affected taxpayers. Indeed, it seems reasonable that no tax would be due from a taxpayer ex parte or at the sole discretion of the tax authority. At least, a tax assessment would first have been issued either on a self-assessment basis by the taxpayer, or by the FIRS in exercise of its powers to issue a deemed income tax assessment in default of a self-assessment (or a tax audit-related assessment following an audit exercise). The tax assessment must have become final and conclusive before a tax payment can be said to be due and payable by a taxpayer. The burden should, expectedly, be on the FIRS to prove to the SBs that a tax assessment issued against each taxpayer has, indeed, become final and conclusive prior to issuance of the Letter of Substitution. The FIRS makes no effort in its Letter to “prove” or provide any reasonable basis for the banks to conclude that tax payments are, indeed, due from the taxpayers listed therein.  The SBs are constituted by Section 49 of CITA and Section 31 of the FIRSEA to be agents of the affected taxpayers and required to act on their behalf. Clearly, the intention of the law is to preserve the tax due and prevent a taxpayer from dissipating its resources without settling its tax liabilities. This must be a measure of last resort or justified by extreme circumstances of a difficult taxpayer with acknowledged liabilities. The SBs, being agents to the taxpayer, owe a duty of care to their principal and not to the FIRS. The SBs, therefore, are exposed to risks, if they were to pay over the sums demanded by the FIRS and it should be established that no such liability (or less liability than the sum actually paid) was due from the taxpayer on whose behalf such payment was made. The Letter of Substitution does not include an indemnity to the SBs for this eventuality. Sections 31(5) and 49(3) of the FIRSEA and CITA, respectively, provide that any notice issued by the FIRS to appoint a bank as an agent of tax collection would be subject to objections and appeals as though such notice were an assessment. Further, Section 36 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria guarantees a person’s right to fair hearing in civil matters, which include taxation. Hence, the FIRS should allow for mechanisms whereby affected persons can object to and appeal against notices issued under the above-referenced provisions. Where a taxpayer disagrees with a notice issued by the FIRS, it is unclear if SBs (in their capacity as agents of the taxpayers) would be required to object to the FIRS on behalf of the customer, or if the taxpayer would be required to object to

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FIRS has gone draconian by freezing accounts of alleged tax defaulters, says KPMG

KPMG, one of the Big Four auditors in the world, says Nigeria’s Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has gone draconian by giving fiats to banks to freeze accounts of suspected tax defaulters. In September 2018, Tunde Fowler, FIRS chairman, said the service was going after 6,772 tax defaulters, stating that they would have their account frozen till they pay due taxes. “So, all these ones of TIN and no pay and no TIN and no pay, to the total of 6772 will have their accounts frozen or put under substitution pending when they come forward,” Fowler had said. “First, they refused to come forward in 2016, they refused to come forward under VAT and are still operating here. So, we are putting them under notice that it is their civic responsibility to pay tax and to file returns on these accounts.” In reality, FIRS has not only frozen the accounts in question, but have also stopped some companies from paying staff salaries or carrying out routine transactions. In addition to this, FIRS has also ordered the banks to deduct the alleged tax debt from these bank accounts “in full or partial payment”. In its KPMG in Nigeria issue 2.5 released in February 2019, the professional service firm, said FIRS has gone too far in its bid to get more people into the tax net. KPMG argued that Section 69 of Companies Income Tax Act (CITA) 2004 “allows a taxpayer to object to a disputed assessment within thirty (30) days from the date of service of the notice of assessment”. The firm adds that “Section 77(3) of CITA further provides that the collection of tax, in any case where notice of an objection or appeal has been given by a taxpayer, shall remain in abeyance until such objection or appeal is determined”. KPMG CONTRAVENING COMPANIES INCOME TAX ACT KPMG said “nothing in the CITA or FIRSEA authorises the FIRS to impose a freeze order on a taxpayer’s bank account beyond the amount of tax proven to be due and payable by that taxpayer”. “The requirement directed to banks not to honour mandates from taxpayers over and above the tax amount supposedly proven by FIRS to be due and payable is without foundation and goes too far.” It added that “the letters to the SBs leave them with 7 days within which to comply with the directives of the FIRS. This is contrary to the provisions of Sections 69 and 77(3) of CITA which permit a taxpayer a 30-day period of review and objection”. FIRS BREACHING BANK-CLIENT CONFIDENTIALITY KPMG stated that the letters of substitution issued to the banks breach the confidentiality agreement between banks and their clients. “Generally, a bank has a fiduciary obligation to maintain the confidentiality of its customers and their transactions, and to prevent third-party access to the customers’ account information,” KPMG said. “The exceptions to this duty are in cases where the bank is required by law or a court of competent authority to make disclosure, and where the customer consents to the disclosure. “We note that the FIRSEA and CITA allow the FIRS to request certain banking information (without breaching the bank’s duty of confidentiality), such as names and addresses of new customers and specific individuals, and details of transactions above N5 million and N10 million for individuals and companies, respectively. “However, these provisions, including relevant provisos, should not be interpreted to have given the FIRS the absolute power to demand all forms of customer information, including details of account balances, bank statements and other financial records of a company, its subsidiaries or principal officers; or power to direct when a bank may honour its customers’ transaction requests.” KPMG SALUTES FIRS TAX DRIVE — WITH CAUTION Concluding its intervention to FIRS, KPMG said: “We note and salute the FIRS’ objectives to bring delinquent taxpayers into the tax net and consequently increase the Federal Government’s tax revenue”. “However, the current practice whereby the FIRS issues fiats to freeze taxpayers’ bank accounts generally and to demand that SBs pay alleged outstanding tax liabilities from customers’ bank balances without recourse to affected persons, is draconian. “This will cast doubt on the Federal Government’s drive to improve the ease of doing business in Nigeria, diminish the credibility of the Nigerian tax system, and erode investors’ confidence in the Nigerian economy.” The company also called on taxpayers to “ensure that they fulfil their civic obligations by paying the right amount of taxes and filing relevant tax returns with the tax authorities, as and when due”.     Source: The Cable

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