Tag: Mrs. Kemi Adeosun

  • FEC approves revised National Tax Policy to check low taxation

    FEC approves revised National Tax Policy to check low taxation

    The Federal Executive Council on Wednesday in Abuja approved a revised National Tax Policy to address low taxation in the country.

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun made this known at a joint press briefing with the Minister of Information and Culture and Minister of State for Aviation Hadi Sirika after the Federal Executive Council meeting.

    The meeting was chaired by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo.

    Nigeria’s tax contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is said to be the lowest in the world with about six per cent.

    Its Value added Tax is also said to be the lowest in the world at five per cent.

    The minister, however, said under the new tax policy, consumers of luxury goods would pay a higher Value Added Tax (VAT).

    According to her, the new VAT per centage for the luxury items is still subject to approval of the National Assembly.

    She expressed the hope that the new revised tax policy, which was recommended by the ministry’s National Policy Tax Review Committee in August 2016, would entrench an efficient tax system.

    This according to her, will also address the low level of tax contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    “What the committee has shown is that we should look at actually increasing VAT on some luxury items.

    “ VAT of five percent, we have lowest VAT and whilst we don’t think VAT should be increased on basic items, if you are going to drink champagne you drink Champagne in the UK and VAT is 20 per cent why should it be five per cent in Nigeria.

    “So, they have made recommendations that we should pull out some luxury items and increase VAT on those items immediately.

    “And I think that is a very valid and sensible suggestion which we are going to talk to the National Assembly to see how we can implement it.

    “But as far as basic goods are concerned, I believe it is only fair that when you consume luxury goods you should pay a little bit more.

    “The National Assembly will decide the percentage,’’ she said.

    She said the approved tax policy would be jointly implemented by the federal, state and local governments, adding that other agencies of government like the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), the media, Civil Society Organisations and others would be involved in the implementation.

    According to the minister, the main thrust of the tax policy is to establish fundamental principles to guide and orderly develop the Nigerian tax system toward meeting its objectives.

    It also recognises the primacy of the taxpayers and clearly states their rights and duties.

    It equally reinforces the role of the ministry of finance in the formulation, coordination and implementation of tax policy on an ongoing basis.

    The policy is expected to guide the operation and review of the tax system and provide the basis for future tax legislation and administration.

     

  • Osinbajo inaugurates task force to reduce food prices

    Osinbajo inaugurates task force to reduce food prices

    Moved by the need to enhance affordability of food prices across country, the Buhari administration has constituted a Presidential Task Force to urgently consider measures that would ensure a steady flow of produce to the market and reverse recent price increases.

    Giving the directive Wednesday at the Federal Executive Council meeting, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, expressed concern at some of the inflationary rates of food prices, noting that the Task Force will explore options to promote availability and affordability of food items to Nigerians.

    According to him, the Task Force, which has seven days from Wednesday to report back to the Council, will consider how to remove some of the cost-raising factors that come into play between the farms and the markets and therefore “bring relief to our people.”

    While there have been reports of bumper harvests in parts of the country, the prices of food stuff still end up rather high, while some of the produce even end up wasted due to a number of reasons preventing effective transportation delivery to the markets.

    One of the focus areas of the Task Force, the Ag. President noted, would be to review the transportation and preservation processes, and see how government can intervene in those aspects to bring down food prices.

    The Task Force, which would be meeting with the Ag. President in the discharge of its urgent assignment, will therefore draw out a practical plan and present same to the Council next week.

    Members of the Task Force include the following:

    Minister of Agriculture & Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh

    Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun

    Minister of Industry, Trade & Development, Dr. Okey Enelamah

    Minister of Transportation, Honorable Rotimi Amaechi

    Minister for Water Resources, Engr. Suleiman Adamu

    Minister of Labour & Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige

    The Offices of the Chief of Staff to the President and the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs, would also be on the Task Force.

     

  • IPMAN urges members to disregard fuel price hike rumour

    IPMAN urges members to disregard fuel price hike rumour

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) in Kano State has told its members to disregard the rumour of a possible price hike of Petroleum Products.

    The state IPMAN Chairman, Alhaji Bashir Dan-Malam, who stated this in an interview with newsmen in Kano on Friday, said the call was necessary to avert hoarding and its attendant hardship on Nigerians.

    Dan-Malam advised members in the state to continue with their normal business as the association would sanction anyone caught hoarding or selling the product above the approved price of N145.

    “As leaders of the association, we feel it is necessary to tell our members the truth as the government has no plan to increase fuel price for now.

    “The rumour is a lie and anything you hear that is not from us, ignore it,” the IPMAN chairman said.

    He commended the recent meeting of the association with the Chief of Staff to the President, Malam Abba Kyari, Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun and Minister of state, Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachukwu.

    The chairman said the meeting was an indication that the Federal Government was ready to listen to their grievances and resolve them.

    Dan-Malam said that during the meeting it was resolved that the union should go and reconcile with the Petroleum Equalisation Fund (PEF) on the outstanding payment of transportation charges.

    “During the meeting, it was agreed that a committee to be chaired by the Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun consisting of all stakeholders be set up with a mandate to reconcile all outstanding balances.

    The aim is to come up with a plan to clear all the issues that have plagued the sector.

    “The administration has clearly demonstrated its willingness to create an enabling environment for a viable and sustainable downstream sector in Nigeria and IPMAN is 100 per cent committed to achieving this goal,” he said.

  • N450bn unremitted revenue: FG recovers additional N793 million from MDAs

    N450bn unremitted revenue: FG recovers additional N793 million from MDAs

    An additional N793 million unremitted operating surpluses from three revenue generating agencies has been recovered by the Federal Government from Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) accused of short-changing the government.

    This was announced in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja by the Director of Information, Federal Ministry of Finance, Salisu Dambatta.

    According to the statement, this is thanks to the Recovery Committee set up two weeks ago by the Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun.

    The Committee was tasked to recover unremitted N450 billion operating surpluses from Federal revenue-generating Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

    The surpluses are legally classified as a Federal Treasury Revenue.

    The Committee immediately swung into action by issuing demand notices to 17 of the initial 33 affected Agencies, out of which it met with 10.

    They included the National Shippers Council, Nigeria Export Promotion Council, National Health Insurance Scheme, Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority and the Nigeria Communication Commission.

    The rest were Nigeria Postal Service, National Pension Commission, Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trading Company, Raw Materials Research and Development Council and the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria.

    According to the statement, the recoveries, totalling N793 million, were made from the Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC), N278 million; Nigeria Shippers Council, N407 million and Nigeria Export Promotion Council, N108 million.

    “So far, the cumulative total amount recovered is N1.44 billion, given the earlier recovery of N650 million from the Nigeria Shippers Council.

    “Several other agencies were in the process of submitting repayment plan for approval.

    Meanwhile, four agencies that were unable to make it to the meeting due to short notice have been rescheduled to appear before the Recovery Committee.

    “They are the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), National Pensions Commission (PENCOM), Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) and the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA),” it stated.

    The Minister of Finance announced recently that many revenue generating Federal Government agencies have not remitted the operating surpluses from the revenues they generated totalling N450 billion from 2010 to date.

    The agencies are required to pay the operating surpluses to the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federal Government not later than one month following the statutory deadline for publishing each
    corporation’s account as provided in the Fiscal
    Responsibility Commission Act 2007.

  • 2017 budget proposal based on recovered looted funds

    2017 budget proposal based on recovered looted funds

    Contrary to insinuations in some quarters that the recovered loots may have been diverted, The Nation can authoritatively report that the projections for the 2017 budget are to be partly funded with some of the recovered loots.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) had reported that there have been widespread animosities over how much has been recovered from the looted funds with some Nigerians making uncomplimentary but uninformed remarks.

    But the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on its Twitter handle, @officialefcc in response to a question from one of its followers, had last week hinted that the recovered loots by the federal government are being warehoused in the Federation Account, thus dispelling rumours that the funds may have been ‘relooted.’

    “Recovered funds are paid into the consolidated revenue account of the federal government,” it tweeted in reply.

    Confirming this development, a highly placed source in the Ministry of Finance, who would not be named because of the sensitive nature of the issue, confided in our correspondent that the recovered loots were in safe hands.

    Speaking exclusively with The Nation over the weekend, the source said: “First, proceeds from the looted funds were captured as part of sources of funding of the 2016 budget.”

    Most of the recovered loots, the source said, “comprised of liquid cash and assets.”

    Pressed further, the source said: “In the 2016 budget, N386 billion was expected to be sourced from recovered loot to fund the budget. I’m sure you are aware of the fact that although the federal government is yet to arrive at the threshold of how much is expected from recovered funds for 2017, the government has given the hint that next year’s budget will also be part-funded from recovered loot.”

    The source was, however, quick to admit that “The major challenge for now is the fact that pending court cases make it difficult for the government to take full possession of some of the recovered funds and assets.”

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, had in a public forum in Lagos assured that the federal government is unfazed by the rising criticisms over efforts at stamping out corruption, saying that every money generated by this administration will be spent wisely including looted funds once they are recouped.

  • Nigeria too big to fail, Adeosun tells World leaders

    Nigeria too big to fail, Adeosun tells World leaders

    The Federal Government has vowed to do everything required to bring Nigeria back to the path of growth with a resolve to the world that Nigeria is too big to fail.

    Speaking on sidelines of the plenary session of the 2016 International Monetary Funds (IMF)/World Bank meeting in Washington DC on Friday, the Finance Minister Mrs. Kemi Adeosun categorically stated that “Nigeria is too big to fail and too significant in the region to underperform.”

    Reacting to the speeches of the World Bank President Dr. Jim Yong Kim and the IMF managing director Ms. Christine Largard, Adeosun stated that “what we are trying to do is to rewrite Nigeria’s economic story so that we can grow, and to grow we need critical infrastructure like power, transport, housing. These are where we are redirecting expenditure from our recurrent where we thought there have been a lot of waste and leakages.”

    The finance minister who was very vibrant and visible at the meeting said the federal government is “redirecting spending to capital to create long-term value, it’s tough in the short term but the long term benefits will be there for the future generation. “We are confident of getting back to growth” she assured the international community.

    With regards to calls by Lagarde and Kim for massive investment in infrastructure, Adeosun stated that, “if we invest in critical infrastructure there will be increased productivity, which will lead to job creation and prosperity for our people and it is very comforting to hear this coming from the highest levels that that is the way to go.”

    Adeosun stated that Nigeria has aligned with the views of the multilateral institutions with regards to inclusive growth, stating that inclusive growth is one of the objectives of this administration to end poverty.

    She noted that Government is “investing heavily in education and as part of our social intervention programme we aim to engage more young graduates into primary schools because, education, I am sure we will be soon start seeing improvements in our education indices.”

    She also stated that government was pumping money into agriculture and women are many in agriculture, they are the key especially in agriculture so we are pumping money into agriculture with small business loans with 60% on agriculture. BoI has assured that it will start disbursing micro loans to women so there is a great focus on women, out of the cooks for the school meal programme are women. Money coming in from part-time jobs makes a huge impact on family living.”

    On his part, the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Mr. Godwin Emefiele said the three-pronged comprehensive approach of monetary, fiscal and structural reforms “is the way everybody has to go and we are doing that in Nigeria, there is serious collaboration between the monetary and fiscal authorities and if we continue in this direction we will achieve these objectives.”

    Commenting on whether the financial sector reforms has been enjoying a buy-in from potential investors, Emefiele said the CBN has “done a lot of reforms like the flexible exchange rate regimes which is picking up gradually, when you have the kind of situation that we have, naturally people will be a bit skeptical but with time as they develop more confidence we will begin to see more and more of them coming into the country.”

    The CBN governor acknowledged that “there are positive indications that meeting and networking with foreign delegations and officials of the IMF and World Bank at this meeting we will achieve some of the objectives that we have in mind. We will work together with China to see that we get our fair share of the benefit of being the earliest country to adopt renminbi as an international currency.”
  • Coal for electricity: Adeosun blasts World Bank, IMF

    Coal for electricity: Adeosun blasts World Bank, IMF

    The federal government on Wednesday lashed out at Western countries and multilateral development institutions for hampering her efforts to provide stable electricity supply to Nigerians.
    Speaking at a panel discussion at the on-going International Monetary Fund (IMF)/ World Bank meeting in Washington DC finance minister Mrs. Kemi Adeosun called the multilateral institutions and their western backers hypocrites for denying Nigeria and other African countries to use coal to generate electricity.
    According to Adeosun “am going to point fingers at multilateral institutions and the west, a good example is the coal-fired power plant, we in Nigeria have coal but we have power problem, yet we’ve been blocked because it is not green, there is some hypocrisy because we have the entire western industrialization built on coal energy, that is the competitive advantage that they have been using, now Africa wants to use coal and suddenly they are saying oh! You have to use solar and the wind (renewable energy) which are the most expensive, after polluting the environment for hundreds of years and now that Africa wants to use coal they deny us.”
    She agreed that Africa needs to make investment in infrastructure but the playing field must be leveled “we need policy consistency to attract bankable projects, we also need macroeconomic stability, but if you want to phase out coal,  no problem but those who started it should lead, those who want us to stop using dirty fuel should stop it first before telling us not to use it. By telling us not to use coal they are pushing us into the destructive cycle of underdevelopment, while you have the competitive advantages, you tie our hands behind us” she said.
    Adeosun went ahead to state categorically that she “would sign up to a global proposal that is fair, with a morally viable sequence that demands that the rich countries have to close their coal fields first before other countries have to do anything.”
    Professor Paul Collier of the University of Oxford who agreed with the finance minister called that “an ethical commitment from an African minister.”
    Nigeria’s finance minister lamented that huge infrastructure gap all over the world and stated that even if the federal government spends all its annual budget for five years on infrastructure, it cannot close Nigeria’s infrastructure gap. The global infrastructure deficit stands at $1.5 trillion.
    At the end of the panel discussion, Adeosun disclosed to Nigerian journalists that efforts of the federal government to repatriate stolen monies from foreign countries was yielding positive results with the US and Switzerland offering to return stolen loots.
    However, to ensure that the repatriated loots are put to good use, the government’s of the countries with these stolen monies she said are demanding that the federal government identify what specific projects specific amounts of money would be devoted to before they release the monies.
    Similarly, a report on fiscal monitoring disclosed that two-thirds of the global debt of the nonfinancial sector—comprising the general government, households, and nonfinancial firms—is currently at an all-time high amounting to about $100 trillion.
    This the report said “consists of liabilities of the private sector which, as documented in an extensive literature, can carry great risks when they reach excessive levels. However, there is considerable heterogeneity, as not all countries are in the same phase of the debt cycle, nor do they face the same risks.”
    However, the report warned that “there are concerns that the sheer size of debt could set the stage for an unprecedented private deleveraging process that could thwart the fragile economic recovery and resolved that “this private debt overhang problem is, however, not easy in the current global environment of low nominal output growth.”
    At another forum, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) of the World Bank Group, has launched a new program that aims to raise $5 billion from global institutional investors to modernize infrastructure in emerging markets over the next five years.
    This fund will open up a new stream of capital flows to improve power, water, transportation, and telecommunications systems in developing countries.
    The initiative called MCPP Infrastructure, builds on the success of IFC’s Managed Co-Lending Portfolio Program, a loan-syndications initiative that enables third-party investors to participate passively in IFC’s senior loan portfolio. In its first phase, the program allocated $3 billion from the People’s Bank of China across 70 deals in less than two years. It demonstrated how large investors can benefit from delegating the processes of deal origination and approvals to IFC.
    The first partnership under the program was signed with the global insurance company Allianz. Under the agreement, Allianz intends to invest $500 million, which will be channeled into IFC debt financing for infrastructure projects in emerging markets. IFC is also in advanced discussions with Eastspring Investments, the Asian asset management business of Prudential, for a commitment of $500 million. Similar discussions are being conducted with AXA, also for a commitment of $500 million.
    MCPP Infrastructure is designed for institutional investors seeking to increase their exposure to emerging markets infrastructure. IFC will originate, approve, and manage the portfolio of loans that will mirror IFC’s own portfolio in infrastructure. It will do so in a manner agreed upfront with its partner investors, always subject to the overall governance of the platform.
  • Economic stimulus: FG plans lower taxes for SMMES

    Economic stimulus: FG plans lower taxes for SMMES

    The Federal Government is set to reduce the income tax rates payable by Small, Micro and Medium Enterprises (SMMEs) in the country to encourage more start-ups in Small, Micro and Medium Enterprises.

    The planned tax reduction will boost the profitability of the existing ones, generate new jobs and make higher contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    A statement from the federal ministry of finance Signed by Salisu Na’Inna Dambatta Director (Information), “the new incentives for SMMEs are part of the recommendations presented to the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, by the 12-member Committee she established, chaired by Professor Abiola Sanni, to review the current National Tax Policy (NTP) in Abuja, Thursday.”

    The Committee he said “noted that lowering the taxes payable by Small, Micro and Medium Enterprises would encourage compliance, promote the growth of SMMEs and expand the manufacturing base of the nation through their activities.”

    Another recommendation suggested for implementation relates to the abolition of minimum tax, which results in loss making companies been required to pay tax.

    The Minister assured that a team would be set up by the Ministry to implement the recommendations of the Committee through administrative measures without delay, while those that require legislations would be forwarded to the Federal Executive Council for consideration.

    According to the finance minister, “we need to deal with legislations that need to be changed. Nigeria cannot afford to be running with antiquated tax laws,” she emphasised.

    The new Tax Policy has also recommended the enactment of a number of legislation amendments including the  law to tax treatment, the taxation of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs).

    “In other climes a REIT is seen as transparent or flow through entity that is not different and separate from its unit holders/investors. The income of the REIT is treated as the income of the unit holders or investors and therefore taxed at that level,” the report clarified rather than the current provisions, which amount to double taxation.

    Earlier in his remarks, the Chairman of the Committee, Professor Abiola Sanni said that the report contained some innovations in terms of suggestions, including 20 implementation strategies, explaining that some of the strategies required legislations while others could hit the ground running.

    “We believe that at the end of the day if the recommendations contained in this report are implemented, Nigeria will witness a transformation of the economy as a whole,” he pointed out.

  • Nigeria is already getting out of recession – Minister

    Nigeria is already getting out of recession – Minister

    Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, the Minister of Finance, on Wednesday said that the nation was already getting out of recession, saying the Federal Government had taken steps that were in the best interest of the citizens.

    Adeosun disclosed this in her closing remarks at a two-day conference of National Council of Finance and Economic Development (NACOFED) in Abeokuta.

    “We are already getting out of recession because of the actions the Federal Government is taking, if you are in a problem, the day you start to step towards progression, you are already getting out of it.

    “The government is investing more in capital than we have ever invested, we are sorting out infrastructures, we are stopping wastage and so the sign of recovery is already there.

    “Agriculture and solid mineral are already starting to grow and so they are responding to our policy initiative and we are expected to continue in that direction.

    “Nigeria is getting out of the trouble that we have found ourselves, we are turning things around and I believe everybody is united and everybody that were here represented the 36 states, “she said.

    Adeosun also urged all the State Commissioners for Finance, Accountant-General and all finance professionals to always take stock and also compute their own balance sheet, saying it would assist them before decisions were taken.

    She explained that the move would allow the states to know their liabilities, strengths and ways to go about their finances in the future; adding that it would in no small measure helped the Federal Government.

    “We need to take stock, one of the most important things I want to encourage all to do is to compute your own balance sheet, what are your assets, what are your liabilities, know your position.

    “What are those pension liability, contractors liabilities that are hidden, bring them out, compute them, know them, it is very important.

    “One of those things we have realised in the Federal level is that if that had been done we would have probably made better decisions in the past.

    “If you don’t have the data you can carry on spending as if all is well only for a problem to come out as it has done in our own case to affect us.

    “I just want to charge everybody to quietly compute your balance sheet and know it so that you can make decisions that really have the full picture, “she said.

     

     

  • Tax review committee recommends Customs, FIRS merger

    Tax review committee recommends Customs, FIRS merger

    The National Tax Policy Review Committee has advised the Federal Government to merge the Federal Inland Revenue Service and Nigeria Customs Service to improve revenue generation and accountability.

    The draft of the policy was presented at the committee’s second Stakeholders Engagement Tuesday in Abuja by Mr Taiwo Oyedele, who is the West Africa Tax Leader at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

    Oyedele said the committee agreed that the current system promoted multitaxation, tax evasion and wastage.

    According to him, “part of our recommendation will be that FIRS and Customs should be merged; but not just them, but all revenue generating agencies at the federal level should be merged into one.”

    He described what exists now as “not effective, because it duplicates the collection mechanism. All the structures you have in FIRS is replicated in Customs, so cost of collection goes up. It also makes it easier for tax evaders to manipulate the system. You can provide information for customs and FIRS is not aware of it.”

    However, having one revenue agency he said “will flag all the information about a tax payer when he or she is paying tax. It will also ensure that leakages in the system are reduced. This is why we are recommending merging, as part of the policy.”

    The committee also recommended that a Tax Amnesty Programme be introduced. He said that some companies or individuals might be afraid to join the tax net for fear of being asked to pay past tax liabilities. However, a tax amnesty he said “would assure the public that past offences would be forgiven, thus enable government to expand the tax net.”

    Other key recommendations of the draft policy include establishment of Taxation Committee at national, and state assemblies, administrative framework for amnesty and whistle blowing.

    These the committee said were necessary to move Nigeria from its current position of 181 out of 189 countries to top 50 on the Ease of Paying Taxes World Report.

    The Chairman of the National Tax Policy Review Committee, Prof. Abiola Sanni, said the need to improve revenue generation in the economy influenced the decisions of the committee.

    The National Tax Policy was first published in 2012 by the then Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, to entrench a robust and efficient tax system in Nigeria. The recent committee was, however, set up by the Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun on August 10 this year to review the existing policy.