Tobi Aminu

Commercial banks to pay N103bn taxes to FIRS

A total of 14 commercial banks listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange are billed to pay N103bn in taxes to the Federal Inland Revenue Service for the 2018 financial year. An analysis of the recent financial statements filed by the banks on the NSE showed that Ecobank Transnational Incorporated will pay the highest amount of N33.61bn. A breakdown of the amount revealed that the tax liability was originally N35.076bn, but a deferred tax asset of N1.46bn was deducted from the amount. Guaranty Trust Bank Plc has the second highest tax liability of N30.85bn, followed by United Bank for Africa Plc, which reported a tax liability of N14.30bn. UBA listed its tax components to include N8.98bn current tax, and N550m Information Technology tax and a deferred tax of N5.32m. Stanbic IBTC Bank Plc reported a tax liability of N13.712bn, followed by Zenith Bank Plc, which is to pay N4.052bn minimum tax. An analysis of the financial statement of Zenith Bank showed that the bank had a total tax liability of N26.63bn, but was assessed based on the minimum tax rule because of a significant non-taxable income that resulted in a taxable loss for the bank. Zenith Bank said included in the total tax amount was N18.04bn dividend tax for 2018 financial year, but it was liable to dividend tax of N25.43bn, which represented 30 per cent of the N84.77bn dividend paid as the Nigerian tax laws required companies to pay tax calculated at 30 per cent of the higher of taxable profit and dividend paid. However, the total Company Income Tax payable based on minimum tax was N4.35bn as the bank had tax paid in the prior year and tax credits amounting to N3.04bn. The difference between income tax payable assessed on dividend and income tax payable assessed on minimum tax amounted to N18.04bn, which was charged as tax expense during the period. Fidelity Bank Plc has a tax liability of N2.16bn, made up of a current tax of N1.91bn and IT tax of N251m. Access Bank Plc reported a tax payable of N1.65bn, which comprised CIT of N4.37bn, IT tax of N752.4m and Capital Gains Tax of N17.8m, after which a deferred tax of N63.49bn was deducted. Wema Bank Plc is billed to pay a tax of N1.47bn for the 2018 financial year, which can further be grouped into CIT of N351.8m, National Information Technology Development Agency tax of N56.06m, and a deferred tax of N1.063bn. Sterling Bank Plc reported a tax of N271m for the period, saying it paid N710m during the year. It had a tax balance brought forward of N232m, a current tax charge of N173m, CIT of N173m and IT tax of N98m. Sterling Bank said the basis of its income tax for 2018 was 30 per cent of N575.808m, which was the value of the dividend paid to shareholders in 2018 and relating to the 2017 financial year. It added that it was not liable to pay CIT in 2017 as it did not have any taxable profit. It also did not pay any dividend in 2017 and had more than 25 per cent imported capital as at the reporting date, which made the bank got an exemption from minimum tax as stated in Section 33(3) of the Company Income Tax Act as amended 2007. According to the bankโ€™s financial report, an unutilised capital allowance of N42.206tn and unused tax losses carried forward and available at N46.813tn were recorded. It said it had deductible temporary differences of N86.33tn to be offset against future taxable profits. However, no deferred tax asset was recognised in respect of the items due to uncertainties regarding the timing and amount of future taxable profits. First City Monument Bank Plc reported a tax liability of N123.3m, made up of N107.1m of dividend tax and N16.2m income tax. The bank said it was assessed based on the minimum tax legislation for the year ended December 31, 2018 because of a tax exemption granted via CIT (Exemption of Bonds and Short-Term Government Securities) Order, 2011 as contained in a gazette issued by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, which took effect from January 2, 2012. It said all the provisions of the CITA that mandated a minimum tax assessment, where a taxpayer did not have any tax liability arising from its tax assessment, were applied. As of the time of collating the results, Diamond Bank Plc, First Bank of Nigeria Limited, Union Bank Plc and Unity Bank Plc had yet to file their 2018 financial statements, so, their financial statements for the nine-months period ended September 30, 2018, were used. Diamond Bank reported a tax of N398.4m, Union Bank reported N164m, Unity Bank reported N57.94m and First Bank reported N38m. Union Bank said it was not liable to pay income tax as it recorded a tax loss for the period. It said it was exempted from paying minimum tax under the Act as it had imported share capital of over 25 per cent. No education tax was charged because the bank has no assessable profit for the period. The Head, Economic Research and Policy Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, Mr Afolabi Olowookere, said of the N5.8tn realised by the FIRS in 2018, listed companies contributed about 60 per cent of the value. He urged exchanges, capital market operators and the Federal Government to work together to increase listing of companies on the stock market, not only for revenue generation but other benefits as well. The Vice-President, Association of Stockbroking Houses of Nigeria, Mr Akinsola Akeredolu-Ale, said most companies that were reluctant to come to the stock market were hiding their financials or were scared of take-over by wealthy Nigerians. He said, โ€œOnce the government can work together with the FIRS to enforce tax laws, there would be no hiding place for companies. Thus, they will be forced to come to the market.โ€ ย A Professor of Economics at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Hyacinth Ichoku, said the Corporate Affairs Commission should

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VAT: What Tinubu failed to tell Buhari โ€“ Peter Obi

The Vice Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in the February 23 presidential election, Mr. Peter Obi, has described as gratifying, the recent warning of All Progressives Congress, APC, leader, Bola Ahmad Tinubu, against the removal of Value Added Tax otherwise called VAT. Obi said that Tinubuโ€™s warning which makes economic sense given the situation in the country was at variance with that of his party and goes to underscore the uncoordinated campaign they dished out to Nigerians. The VP candidate said in a statement from his media office on Sunday that the position of the PDP and the presidential candidate which was made loud and clear during the electioneering is that tax must be relaxed to act as incentive to investors. Obi insisted that the right way to go to shape up the economy given the magnitude of unemployment in the country is to have an attractive economic policy that will be inviting to entrepreneurs and investors. He stated that APCโ€™s earlier stance of increasing tax, VAT inclusive shows the height of insensitivity of a government that careless about the plight of the populace. Obi said that Tinubuโ€™s warning is good but he should have been humble enough to credit to the opposition party instead of making it feel as if it has been the position of the party. โ€œItโ€™s extremely unrealistic for anybody to think of growing the economy of this country, and creating jobs just by increasing tax, itโ€™s too a simplistic approachโ€, he noted. The former Anambra State Governor said that he hopes that Tinubu would go further also to advice his party to embrace restructuring as that is the only option left to move this country forward. โ€œAnybody thinking that this country will work without tinkering with the political and economic structure is deceiving himself because no nation grows on injusticeโ€, he added. Obi furtehr described as unfortunate the fact that Nigeria with all her potentials is among the three African countries according Pew Research Center Where 45% of the adult population are desiring to leave the country.   Source: Dailypost

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Tax evasion: Court renews arrest warrant against Monalisa Chinda

A Lagos High Lagos in sitting in Igbosere on Monday renewed a bench warrant for the arrest of actress and producer, Monalisa Chinda Coker, over a tax evasion charge. The presiding judge, Adedayo Akintoye renewed the order for Cokerโ€™s arrest following her repeated failure to honor court summons. When the case was called Monday, neither Coker nor her legal representatives was present in court. Prosecution counsel, Babatunde Sumonu, informed the judge that the bench warrant issued in January had yet to be effected. โ€œThe bench warrant is to continue,โ€ Justice Akintoye held. Justice Akintoye made the original order for Cokerโ€™s arrest last January 21, following an application by the Lagos State Ministry of Justice. The state alleged that Coker repeatedly failed to honour a court summons. The 44-year-old actress is facing a two-count charge of failing to file annual tax returns and pay income tax for her company, Monalisa Code Production, over a six-year period. Proceedings have been adjourned till June 5.   Source: Gtv.ng

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VAT: Economy Will Be More Vulnerable, Manufacturers Warn Nigerian Govt

The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) has asked the Federal Government to tread with caution in the drive for improved revenue. The Director-General of MAN, Mr Segun Ajayi-Kadir, said this in a statement on Wednesday while reacting to the plan by the government to increase the Value Added Tax (VAT). Officials of the Federal Ministry of Finance had defended the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) that VAT be increased by 50 per cent during a presentation in the Senate. Ajayi-Kadir, however, said such policy was not โ€˜manufacturing friendlyโ€™, adding that implementing it would have a negative effect as a result of the planned increase in minimum wage. โ€œAs plausible as the recommendation to increase VAT may look, implementing it at this time would boomerang because the timing is inappropriate, especially at a time when the minimum wage of N30,000 was just agreed upon,โ€ he stated. The MAN DG added, โ€œThis could send a wrong signal that the government is not sensitive to the plight of the low- and middle-income earners, who are clearly in the majority. The Nigerian economy will be in a more vulnerable state if VAT is increased. โ€œNo controversy, the burden of the tax would be shifted to the Nigerian consumers that are already struggling, the economy would certainly experience demand crunch, inventory of unsold items would soar, profitability of manufacturing concerns would be negatively impacted, many factories will witness serious downturn or wind down operations.โ€ Ajayi-Kadiri, therefore, advised the government to widen the tax net rather than increase the rate in order to meet the growing need for more revenue to address the development objective of the country. He also appealed to the government not to increase the VAT at this time but consider the implementation of the afore-mentioned tax specific recommendations. The MAN DG asked the government to continue to ramp-up support for the manufacturing sector in the best interest of the people.   Source: Channels

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FIRS Warns Defaulting Taxpayers About Potential Restriction On Their Bank Accounts

Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has issued a warning to defaulting taxpayers on the impending lien to be imposed on their bank accounts for non-compliance. In the publication issued, FIRS admonished business entities with annual banking turnover of โ‚ฆ100million and above and those who have been collecting Value Added Tax (VAT) and deducting withholding tax (WHT) without remitting same to it, to regularise their tax status by 15 March 2019 or risk being locked out of their bank accounts. You would recall that FIRS recently instructed banks to suspend lien placed on defaulting taxpayers’ accounts for a period of 30 days, without clearly stating what will happen to the bank accounts at the expiration of the 30-day period. By this notice, FIRS has cleared all doubts on events to follow after expiration of the 30-day grace period. FIRS is empowered under Section 31 of the FIRS (Establishment) Act (FIRSEA) and Section 49 of the Companies Income Tax Act (CITA) to appoint any person to be the agent of a taxable person for the purpose of recovering tax debts from such taxable person. Also, the agent appointed may be required to pay any tax payable by the taxable person from any money held by the agent on behalf of, or due to, the taxable person. However, the FIRS power of substitution derived from the sections noted above has been greeted with widespread criticism from various stakeholders and raised a number of legal questions. Further, the approach has resulted in disruption of business operations of taxpayers and ultimately, ease of doing business in Nigeria. We will continue to monitor developments in this space and provide updates as soon as they become available. Meanwhile, we advise taxpayers to continue to review their tax records and ensure full tax compliance to avoid disruption of their business operations.   Source: Mondaq

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Revisiting Nigeriansโ€™ tax culture

Tax administration and the system of taxation in Nigeria was once again brought to the fore when President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday reiterated the federal governmentโ€™s resolve to continue to sensitise and encourage Nigerians to cultivate the culture of paying taxes by ensuring fair policy implementation and effective utilisation of resources. The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina, said Buhari stated this when he received the leadership of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN) at the State House, Abuja on Tuesday. The president revealed that the National Tax Policy document had been reviewed with the aim of institutionalising a tax payment culture within the Nigerian workforce. Buhari said the progress made in diversifying the economy, providing social security and securing the country could be further improved with enhanced and expanded revenue base. โ€œWe have made some progress in the past four years. However, a lot more can still be done. A key step is to enhance and expand governmentโ€™s revenue base. Today, we still rely on oil as our main source of income. This simply is not enough to meet our infrastructure, social services and security needs,โ€ he said. While describing Nigerians as hardworking and entrepreneurial, the president said a deeper understanding of the effectiveness of tax on the economy by the populace and fair administration would help in improving governmentโ€™s revenue shortfalls. In his remarks, the President of CITN, ChiefCyril Ede, congratulated the president for winning his second term in office, and assured him of the instituteโ€™s support for a successful tenure, especially in the area of using tax to improve governmentโ€™s revenue. โ€œYour victory is a clear sign of belief, trust and confidence that Nigerians have in you,โ€ he said. Ede said some higher institutions in the country had started offering taxation as a course, hoping it will also be taught in secondary schools. According to him, nations can only achieve development with mobilization of resources through taxation. The president of CITN said: โ€œPolitical leaders must set a good example for compliance on tax payment by ensuring that presentation of tax certificates remain one of the central requirements for those who want to contest elective positions.โ€ President Buhariโ€™s remark tends to reignite the debate on the need to review the nationโ€™s tax policy as well as diversification of the economy, which is long overdue. This assertion is particularly relevant owing to the fact that the statement is coming on the heels of media report that the federal government is proposing to raise the Value Added Tax (VAT) from five percent to 50 percent to, among other things, enable it meet obligations to workers following the recent approval of increase in national minimum wage from N18,000 to N30,000. Although the issue of taxation in Nigeria is still a thorny one, remarkably the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) recorded an all-time high tax revenue collection of N5.23 trillion in 2018, given that it was achieved at a period when oil prices averaged $70 per barrel. VAT stood at N1.11 trillion for the first time. Prior to 2018, the highest revenue figure ever attained by FIRS was N5.07 trillion, in 2012, when oil price hovered around $100-$120 per barrel. Besides, the FIRS will be expanding its dragnet and tightening noose against tax evaders, having been given an N8 trillion target this year. The Chairman of FIRS, Dr. Babatunde Fowler, had during the 2019 Management and Stakeholders Retreat, in Lagos, recently reiterated the need for increased compliance to tax laws, adding that there would not be any serious discussion on diversification of the economy without reviewing the countryโ€™s tax regime for optimal performance. The Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Finance, Babangida Ibrahim, while commending the FIRS on the feat achieved, pledged the lawmakersโ€™ support for every initiative that would lead to efficient tax system in the country. โ€œThe taxation of any economy and growth of policies of government depends largely on the revenue generated by the tax authorities. We agree that to achieve effective taxation, the support of the parliament cannot be over-emphasised,โ€ he said. At the retreat with the theme: โ€œParliamentary Support for Effective Taxation of the Digital Economy,โ€ Fowler said FIRS has adopted initiatives that ensure a robust tax administration that is agile and beneficial to all stakeholders. According to him, with the deployment of various digital innovations, cost of collections in non-oil sector has improved from four per cent per N85.99 billion and N100.3 billion in 2016 and 2017 respectively, to N114.1 billion in 2018. It is our view, however, that the Nigeria tax system cannot operate effectively and efficiently except such burning issues as tax evasion and avoidance are reduced to the barest minimum while several others are also adequately addressed. While tax reforms in consonance with global best practices are inevitable, it is high time the federal government lived up to its billing to diversify the nationโ€™s economy from its overdependence on the dwindling crude oil revenue. This will go a long way to address the contentious and contemporary issues at boosting the revenue earning capacity of government.   Source: Blueprint

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Fowler says VAT is for poor

The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) yesterday explained that the Value Added Tax (VAT) is a consumption tax primarily designed to support poor people, and not to create hardship for them. Itโ€™s Executive Chairman, Babatunde Fowler allayed fears that the increase in VAT may cause hardship for the poor, stating that VAT is charged on consumption and capacity to consume. He said: โ€œWhen you donโ€™t consume certain categories of goods and services, you are not liable to pay VAT charges on those items. The VAT is not charged on all medical and pharmaceutical products. It is not charged on basic food items. It is not charged on books and educational materials. It is not charged on baby products, fertilizers, locally produced agricultural and veterinary medicine. A VAT is not charged on farming machinery and farming transportation equipment. โ€œVAT is not charged on all exports, plant machinery and goods imported for use in Export Processing Zones and free trade zone: Provided that 100 percent production of such company is for export. โ€œOther services exempted from VAT are medical services, services rendered by Community Banks, Peopleโ€™s Bank and Mortgage Institutions, plays and performances conducted by educational institutions as part of learning and all exported services are exempted from VAT. Fowler said some people misunderstood what VAT is. The VAT is a consumption tax. If you donโ€™t have money to purchase certain categories of goods and services and you donโ€™t consume them, then VAT is not your problem. โ€œVAT is used to assist the needy. VAT provides support for the needy, not a hardship on them; 85 percent of VAT collected is shared among states for them to provide free education, free health services, provide basic amenities among others. โ€œWe can see what the Federal Government is doing with the tax money. Look at the rail system, the Abuja-Kaduna rail is complete. Look at the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, look at the education system, the school feeding programme among others. If at the state level, your government cannot justify the taxes you pay to them, you have the right to vote them out in the next four years,โ€ Fowler said, according to a statement from FIRS.   Source: Pulse

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You canโ€™t increase VAT, Tinubu tells FG

The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Bola Tinubu, on Thursday urged the Federal Government not to increase the Value Added Tax. He said an increase in VAT will reduce the spending capacity of the people and might increase hardship. He urged the Federal Government to rather consider increasing the tax net. He spoke on Thursday during the 11th Bola Tinubu Colloquium marking his 67th birthday, at the International Conference Centre, Abuja. It may be recalled that, sequel to the approval of N30,000 as minimum wage by the National Assembly, the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udo Udoma; and the Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, Mr. Babatunde Fowler, had said the Federal Government was considering an upward review of the Value Added Tax by 50 per cent. Udoma and Fowler who stated this on Tuesday when they appeared before the Senate Committee on Finance, said the increment was to, among others, enable the Federal Government to fund the new national minimum wage. Fowler said the proposed payable VAT by Nigerians based on the increment would actually be between 35 per cent (6.75%) and 50 per cent (7.25%). The government is currently charging five per cent VAT on all products in the country.   Source: Punch

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Raising VAT to pay salaries

Having dug itself into a fiscal hole, the Federal Government is preparing to make Nigeriaโ€™s public finances even messier. To meet its obligations in the impending new wage bill negotiated with labour unions, Budget and National Planning Minister, Udoma Udo Udoma, said changes were being mulled in the Value Added Tax rate, among others, โ€œto fund the (new) minimum wage once it is announced.โ€ This is counter-productive, unimaginative and ultimately bound to hurt business and the fragile economic recovery process. Nigeria needs today above all else,ย  economic managers that understand the demands and dynamics of policies that will promote free enterprise, investment, job creation and efficient fiscal management best practices. Sadly, this has been signally lacking in President Muhammadu Buhariโ€™s government and its predecessors. In times of adversity, visionary leadership thinks outside the box. The proposal to raise the five per cent VAT rate across the board is anything but visionary. Inflation could rise, job losses worsened and pressure on pay and pensions increased. As a result, millions more people may be pushed into extreme poverty. Udo Udoma and the Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, Babatunde Fowler, briefingย  the Senate Committee on Finance, both hinted at changes in the VAT rate โ€œand other things.โ€ Fowler was quoted as saying that the increase could come by this year end. Although he has since issued a rebuttal, claiming he was misquoted, he nevertheless canvassed a review of the VAT rate. Reviewing the VAT rate is in itself not a bad idea, especially as the five per cent rate has been maintained since its introduction about 25 years ago. The motive and the timing are however reprehensible. There is no justification whatsoever to raise the sales tax on all goods and services to be paid by all for the purpose of raising the salaries of less than two per cent of the population.ย  Nigerians are poor, denied the benefits of their natural material endowments precisely because of a distorted governance template that impoverishes the many and directs resources to only a few. Already, civil servants, elected and appointed officials absorb a disproportionate slice of all federal, state and local government expenditure. In the 2018 national budget, for instance, over N2.9 trillion out of the total outlay of N9.1 trillion was earmarked for personnel costs. The N8.82 trillion budget proposals for 2019 being considered by the parliament set aside N3.4 trillion for these purposes. The timing is altogether wrong; when the economy slows or contracts, intelligent governments adopt measures to stimulate productive activities, boost consumer demand and create jobs. A favourite time-tested one is to offer corporate bodies and investors tax breaks to free resources for investment and new hires. A sweeping VAT rate increase will achieve the opposite as Nigeriaโ€™s productive sectors are currently beset by low consumer demand, factory closures, exchange rate instability, high energy and inputs costs, gridlock at the ports and capital flight. Of the 272 firms reported by the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria to have shut down in the 12 months to August 2016, 222 of them were small businesses that dropped over 180,000 jobs. The National Bureau of Statistics put the number of jobless at 20.9 million by December 2018 as unemployment spiked to 23.1 per cent.ย  A thinking government would first, have linked salary increases to productivity, right-sizing and realistic revenue expectations. Singapore, reputed to have one of the worldโ€™s best public services, has in-built pay increases and in 2017, added $15-20 to the monthly pay of lower level civil servants in response to first quarter GDP growth of 2.7 per cent and expected 3 per cent growth by year end. Instead of a general VAT increaseย  that will be passed on to consumers, further reduce spending power and provoke more job losses, the government should first implement liberalising policies at the ports and fine-tune existing ones. It should ramp up new tax incentives and devote considerable energy to promoting SMEs and start-ups. Considered the backbone of its economy and comprising over 90 per cent of its 65 per cent workforce, Malaysia has a procurement policy compelling patronage of its products and services. More importantly, the measure is cynical and doubly discriminatory. Fowler has repeatedly highlighted how wealthy individuals and corporate entities evade taxes. Kemi Adeosun, the immediate past minister of finance, lamented in 2017 that only 14 million of the 70 million taxable adults paid tax and that 800,000 firms had never paid tax; while Lagos State admitted that, of its eight million taxable adults, less than 600,000 paid income tax. That is not all; oil companies are said to owe Nigeria over $43 billion as confirmed by a Supreme Court judgement, while NEITI, the extractive industry watchdog, every year publishes details of revenue leakages running into billions of dollars, and corruption at the Nigeria Customs Service continues to deprive the three tiers of government their much needed revenue. It is cynical to cite the higher VAT rates in other jurisdictions to beguile the unwary. Singaporeโ€™s sales tax rate of 7-8 per cent must be juxtaposed with its efficient, affordable public transportation, health care and utilities. South Africaโ€™s efficient 22,000 kilometres of rail and its expanding network of subsidised bus services have no peer in Nigeria. A more cautious approach is to introduce the increase sectorally.ย  For instance in January, a VAT rate increase from 9 per cent to 13.5 per cent was introduced in the hospitality sectors only in Ireland. In the United Kingdom, there are three bands of VAT: zero, 5 per cent and 20 per cent. According to the BBC, many regular purchases such as food and childrenโ€™s clothing are zero-rated. Domestic fuel and wind-turbine installation are 5 per cent. Other things like hot take-aways and televisions are 20 per cent. Fowler and the other agencies should, therefore, go after tax dodgers, seal the leakages and widen the tax net by greater efficiency and the use of technology tools. The government needs the political will to compel tax compliance among

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PwC: Nigeria needs money, yet paying taxes is difficult

Taiwo Oyedele, head of tax, PwC Nigeria, says Nigeria is one of the most difficult places to pay tax despite the governmentโ€™s need for taxpayersโ€™ money. Speaking at the recently held Tax Academy Clinic, the tax master advised the tax authorities to make technology the platform for paying taxes; not as an option. โ€œTechnology makes things faster, more efficient and more cost-effective. Itโ€™s no longer acceptable for authorities to live in the past. Even though Nigeria is starting late, they say better late than never,โ€ he said. โ€œNigeria doesnโ€™t rank very well on the ease of paying taxes. Nigeriaโ€™s tax revenue to GDP ratio is one of the lowest in the world, yet it is one of the most difficult places to pay tax. It is a contradiction: you need tax money but you make the process very difficult. โ€œSo, the idea now is to make technology the platform, not an option, for tax compliance in terms of calculating your taxes, making your payments, and filing your returns. In the past, getting your tax clearance certificate used to be like rocket science. โ€œWhen you need it to buy a plot of land or get a contract, getting the TCC is difficult. With technology now, one should be able to get that immediately. We know that these platforms are not perfect yet; so, our role as PwC, helping so many people to pay their taxes and also paying taxes ourselves, is that once we identify what the problems are, we get the stakeholders to come together to see how we can fix the problems.โ€ He said the use of technology will ensure that the cost of tax compliance is reduced, making it easy to pay taxes. โ€œSo, if you simplify it by using technology, what that does is you encourage more people to pay. There is something about compliance cost; it is something that does not benefit the government and the taxpayer. โ€œIt is actually the money the taxpayer pays that doesnโ€™t get to the government. So, both the taxpayer and the government have an objective to reduce that cost. โ€œSo you can get more people into the tax net and you can get data which is important within the economy for planning government policies that support taxpayers. At the end of the day, taxes are the way the government gets a fraction of the prosperity of people and businesses.โ€ During the tenure of Kemi Adeosun, former minister of finance, the federal government had embarked on the Voluntary Assets and Income Declaration Scheme (VAIDS) to widen the tax base and encourage tax compliance.   Source: Thecable

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