Tag: BRIC

  • Taxation: Lagos simplifies tax collection with technology

    Nigeria’s tax authorities are still burdened with obsolete tax laws, dearth of technology in tax administration, inefficiencies in tax collection and poor compliance levels. But Lagos State is setting a good example that should be copied by others. Aside the deployment of technology to boost tax collection, the state is working with its House of Assembly to upgrade its tax laws for simplicity and efficiency.

    Many great economies build key infrastructure using tax revenues. For instance in 2010, South Africa was invited to join Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) and many wondered why Nigeria was not picked ahead of South Africa, considering its population, size, abundant oil and gas resources and strong growth prospect.

    Today, the BRIC has become BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), a group of five newly industrialised or developing economies, which sought to have closer economic, financial and political ties among themselves and use their combined influence to shape the world’s socio-economic and financial narratives. The BRICS countries  are drawn from four continents (South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa) and they are the largest or among the largest economies in each of their regions.

    A Lagos tax expert/public analyst, Seun Olamilekan, said Nigeria could have learnt and benefitted a great deal from membership of the association, particularly in the area of taxation. He explained that only recently, the BRICS’s tax authorities signed a taxation cooperation memorandum. Among other things, the agreement is expected to foster greater cooperation among members on taxation efficiency, capacities, policies, collection, improving consultation procedures on taxation, and encouraging information exchange on taxation. These are areas Nigeria could have gained critical insight and knowledge.

    “Nigeria continues to struggle with its tax system and administration. The country’s tax authorities are still burdened with obsolete tax laws, dearth of technology in tax administration and consequently inefficiencies in tax collections and poor compliance levels. The Nigerian tax system, according to experts, is still largely “characterised by complex distortions and inequitable taxation laws” fostered by “multiplicity of rates and unnecessary exemptions.

    “Many of the country’s tax laws are obsolete and out of tune with current reality. It is not surprising therefore, that the country’s tax-to-Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio is a mere six per cent. The BRICS’ economies, on the other hand, earn an average tax-to-GDP ratio of 24 per cent (Russia’s tax collection is 19.5 per cent of its GDP, China 20 per cent, India 17.7 per cent, South Africa 26.9 per cent, and Brazil 34.4 per cent) PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) tagged Nigeria’s six per cent “abysmal,” he stated.

    However, Lagos State seems to have taken a few pages out of the BRICS’ tax book and the state is reaping the benefits. Aside the deployment of technology, the state is working with its House of Assembly to upgrade its tax laws for simplicity, equity, certainty, relevance, and efficiency. Recently, a public hearing was held by the state House of Assembly on a bill to repeal the 17-year-old Land Use Charge Law and enact a new one that will consolidate all property taxes in the state (tenement rate, neighbourhood improvement tax, land rates) into one tax, the Land Use Charge Law.

    Olamilekan said the legislators promised at the hearing to undertake an impact assessment of Lagos State tax laws with a view to amend and, or enact new ones, where necessary, to meet the present and urgent tax needs of the state.

    “The new Land Use Charge Law was comprehensive enough to satisfy the basic requirements of a good tax. By collapsing the multiple property tax law in the state into one law, the government has simplified the law. The new law will be equitable and standardised; assessment of tax due is to be calculated based on the property type and the market value, unlike the old law where valuation is arbitrary and the taxpayer is not certain of his tax obligations. All this, coupled with deployment of e-filing, is expected to help the efficiency of the law,” he said.

    Lagos already boasts of about 30 per cent tax compliance rate. This is far better than the country’s six per cent and even  higher than the BRICS’ average of 24 per cent. It is expected that the new tax administration, with up-to-date tax laws, will further boost this compliance figure and provide the state with additional resources to tackle its developmental agenda.

    But most importantly, there appear to be a clear trust by residents in the state to deploy tax revenue judiciously. For long, Lagos residents, and indeed, Nigerians, had complained that the impact of government was hardly felt. That is no longer the case in Lagos. The state has demonstrated good faith and has shown that it can be trusted with taxpayers’ money to deliver people-oriented and impactful projects.

    The government is investing in a modern and efficient transportation system: rail (Okokomaiko-Marina and Iddo terminal-Alagbado); Automated Guideway Transit (Ikoyi-VI-Ajah line); Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) plying routes across the state; channelisation of the waterways (construction of jetties and provision of ferry services); roads rehabilitation; upgrades and maintenance. It is equally investing heavily in social infrastructure, upgrading schools, health facilities and working hard to protect the environment.

    Compliance remains a major challenge to surmount. At the 2017 Stanbic IBTC/Standard Bank West to East Africa Investors’ Conference, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, told the audience that the country’s “tax burden is not being shared fairly… being carried by those, who are least able to afford it.”

    According to her, the country “only has 14 million taxpayers out of about 70 million people that are economically active”. And even at that, “majority of that 14 million are those, who have their taxes deducted at the source, largely lower income workers”. Very few voluntarily file tax returns.

    Analysts said the hallmark of a strong tax system/administration includes its simplicity for citizens to understand their tax obligations; equitability: relevance to reflect current realities; efficiency; enforceability with mechanisms for compliance and transparency, free from ambiguities and uncertainties.

    The country’s tax system, unfortunately, fails many of these basic criteria. The BRICS economies have very dynamic tax systems that are constantly reviewed to ensure relevance. As well, they deploy functional electronic filing systems to ensure standardisation and efficiency.

    At 59 taxable items, Nigeria has one of the highest tax charges in the world. This is a major contributor to its regular poor performance in the yearly Ease of Doing Business index. Urgent reform is needed to consolidate the multiple taxes and streamline them for convenience and simplicity.

    Besides, when a “tax burden is not shared fairly” and “only 14 million out of 70 million” pay taxes, then such a tax system lacks equity and clearly negates the basic ‘ability to pay’ principle of taxation. Such a tax system needs strengthening. Brazil, India and China operate a progressive tax system, where a taxpayer’s tax burden rises with income. So, those who earn more pay more.

    Tax regulation should also be cost effective to both the government and the taxpayers. The BRICS economies regularly streamline their tax systems, administration, and procedures to make them more efficient and ensure everyone is captured in the tax net.

    Besides, there is room for improvement if Nigeria’s attempt to boost tax revenue via better compliance will be realised. In 2015, the tax authorities introduced a centralised electronic payments system, which allows taxpayers to file tax returns at the nearest tax office to them. The ongoing voluntary asset and income declaration (VAID) campaign is expected to induce compliance. No doubt these initiatives will increase tax revenue in the short term. However, long term gains will only be possible if the tax system is reformed alongside technology adoption.

  • ACCA urges Nigeria to justify ‘MINT’ status

    ACCA urges Nigeria to justify ‘MINT’ status

    The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the global body for professional accountants, has urged Nigeria to live up to its status as a new economy hub.

    Nigeria, Mexico, Indonesia and Turkey are referred to as the next economy frontiers with an acronym, ‘MINT’.

    The country is expected to take a cue from the BRIC nations – Brazil, Russia, India and China. It is expected to increase opportunities for accountants.

    “Many people will be aware that Nigeria, alongside Mexico, Indonesia and Turkey, forms part of a new acronym, ‘MINT’, the next big thing. They will also be aware that the world is watching to see if the ‘MINT’ countries will become an influential group as their ‘BRIC’ predecessors.

    “This highlights the increasing role Nigeria is playing in the global economy,” Goldman Sachs Bank said.

    ACCA hoped that through its Nigerian branch, the nation would create a platform at the BRIC Summit to address increased training of Nigerian accountants to create more opportunities for them at the global level.

    “It is an issue which members of ACCA Nigeria’s National Advisory Committee (NAC) discussed at a meeting. ACCA Nigeria will work with NAC to ensure that employers, businesses, students and parents are aware of the scope of work that ACCA members can undertake and will speak to the government and the regulators to ensure there is clarity over the contributions ACCA members make to the Nigerian business community,” ACCA added.

     

  • BRICs, MINTs strong despite emerging market wobbles

    The large, fast-growing emerging market countries dubbed the BRICs and MINTs are still likely to be the most promising investment destinations over the next decade, despite emerging market turbulence, Jim O’Neill, who coined the terms, said.

    Former Goldman Sachs economist O’Neill came up with the name BRIC in 2001 to group Brazil, Russia, India and China as countries whose growth will shape the world economy in the coming decades.

    This year, in a series on BBC radio, he championed the MINT group of countries, similarly blessed with fast economic growth and large, young populations – Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey – as the next economic giants after the BRICs.

    “The BRIC and the MINT countries, if I’m right, over the next decade will … shape the world economy’s development,” O’Neill told Reuters on Tuesday on the sidelines of an Africa Finance Corporation conference in Nigeria’s commercial hub of Lagos.

    “And if that’s the case, they will be the most successful places in terms of investments too.”

    O’Neill’s coining of the BRIC acronym spurred a rash of funds focusing on these countries – a consequence he told Reuters he never intended – but anxiety about emerging markets has triggered a pullback over the past year.

    BRIC funds held 9 billion euros ($12.41 billion) at the end of last year, from 21 billion euros at end 2010. This has been largely driven by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s tapering of its bond-buying program, which exposed how vulnerable frontier and emerging markets can be to hot money.

    It also has begun to dawn on investors that economic growth does not always mean higher stock market returns, which can be hindered by corporate governance problems or dodgy accounting.

    “Fed tapering is why the masses are exiting emerging markets but that’s because they’re all like sheep,” O’Neill said.

    “Greed and fear are close cousins. People are in love with emerging markets one year, next minute they hate them.”

    But O’Neill said two countries that responded to tapering with sound policies – India and Indonesia – had done well.

    “What the whole episode of the last years shows is that emerging markets can’t rely on generous external circumstances being persistent,” he said. “You’ve got to do better.”

    The underperformance of BRICs over the past three years has put many investors off investing by acronyms, but O’Neill said a fairer comparison was to look at the way the BRIC index has outperformed the developed markets since 2000. Global companies had had huge successes by focusing on them.

     

  • Regus Survey: Nigerian exporters well positioned for profit

    Regus Survey: Nigerian exporters well positioned for profit

    Export- focused Nigerian and other West African companies with links to China and other BRIC nations are particularly well positioned to record better profits and revenues.

    This indication emerged from the latest research by Regus, the leading provider of flexible workplaces which will be celebrating its Lagos Mulliner Towers centre’s 7th anniversary at the end of the year.

    Brazil, Russia, India and China make up BRIC countries.

    The Chinese ambassador to Nigeria, Ambassador Deng Boqing described Nigeria’s economy as promising while highlighting Nigeria’s potentials for greatness as most populous country in Africa.

    He said: “Nigeria’s economy has been performing well in the past 11 months. The GDP grows at a rate of over 6 percent, the crude production stays at around 2.4million barrel per day and your foreign reserve increased to $45 billion.

    Regus’ second Global Survey report on export business, which canvassed opinion from more than 20 000 senior business managers in over 90 countries, shows that firms that trade internationally are more profitable than businesses that stick to their domestic markets.

     

    • 50% of global firms that export say they’ve increased profits over the last 12 months compared with 38% of companies that only trade domestically
    • 59% of companies that export said their revenues had grown compared with 37% of firms focused domestically

     

    • China is the most popular market with 48% of businesses exporting there, ahead of Europe (41%), North America (36%), India (31%) and South America (31%)

     

    • The most profitable areas for export are emerging markets and Europe

     

    The company’s report according to Joanne Bushell, VP Africa & Middle East not only spotlights the advantages of export orientation for West Africancompanies, it also highlights exporter concerns.

     

    “These include worries about property and paperwork; an issue raised by 78% of respondents and the challenge of building an image abroad, a concern for 35% of respondents while risk management is an issue for 40%.

     

    “Regus has the network, resources and expertise to help current and potential exporters with challenges such as this,” Bushell stated.

     

    She said  Regus office centres in locations worldwide are positioned in upmarket business areas and are equipped with the latest office and computer technology – bestowing substantial image benefits on client firms and ensuring market newcomers have the support necessary to make a strong impression.

     

    “Property concerns are obviously outsourced to the solution-providers at Regus as clients do not have to invest in bricks and mortar or sign lease agreements that lock them into sometimes onerous conditions.

     

    “This obviously mitigates many of the risks faced by a new entrant to a chosen export market.

     

    “In addition, Regus products like Virtual Office and Businessworld bestow great agility and enable clients to gradually build critical mass and rightsize their operations in specific markets,” Bushell said.

     

    Regus operates in Lagos and Abuja.  It  is also  represented in Ghana, Senegal and Ivory Coast. In a desirable export destination like China – which according to South African based Standard Bank, is Africa’s single biggest trading partner[2]– Regus has a presence in 52 centers in China. Worldwide, the business is represented in over 1500 locations, 600 cities and 99 countries.

     

    Over 24,000 business respondents from over 90 countries sourced from Regus’ global contacts database of over 1 million business-people worldwide which is highly representative of senior managers and owners in business across the globe were interviewed in September 2012 for the survey.

    Respondents were asked which they felt were the biggest challenges to productivity when working from the home. The survey was managed and administered by the independent organisation, MindMetre, www.mindmetre.com

     

    Regus is the world’s largest provider of flexible workplaces, with products and services ranging from fully equipped offices to professional meeting rooms, business lounges and the world’s largest network of video communication studios.

     

    Regus enables people to work their way, whether it’s from home, on the road or from an office. Customers such as Google, GlaxoSmithKline, and Nokia join hundreds of thousands of growing small and medium businesses that benefit from outsourcing their office and workplace needs to Regus, allowing them to focus on their core activities.