Tag: Nigeria News

  • Nigeria breaks negative foreign portfolio flows

    For the first time in 12 months, Nigeria has recorded positive foreign investment flow as foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) appeared to be showing renewed interests in Nigerian securities, implying that more foreign portfolio investments came into the country than outflows.

    The FPIs report indicated a positive net foreign portfolio investment of about 20.5 per cent. The report also showed 10.6 per cent increase in total foreign portfolio transactions with FPIs outpacing domestic transactions at the Nigerian equities market for the second consecutive month.

    The FPIs report, coordinated by the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), included transactions from nearly all custodians and capital market operators and it is widely regarded as a credible measure of foreign portfolio investment (FPI) trend. The report uses two key indicators-inflow and outflow, to gauge foreign investors’ mood and participation in the stock market as a barometer for the economy.

    Foreign portfolio outflow includes sales transactions or liquidation of equity portfolio investments through the stock market while inflow includes purchase transactions on the NSE. Segmental analysis delineates the proportion of foreign to local participation, institutional to retail investors as well as the momentum of activities among others.

    Foreign portfolio inflows 23.04 per cent from N28.98 billion in July 2019 to N34.92 billion in August 2019 while foreign portfolio outflow improved from N29.40 billion to N28.98 billion during the same period, representing a 20.5 per cent or N5.94 billion net FPIs in August compared with a deficit of N1.02 billion or 3.6 per cent in July. The last positive FPI flow was in August 2018. Total foreign transactions thus increased from N57.78 billion in July to N63.90 billion in August.

    The report showed that while Nigerian domestic investors- both retail and institutional, tended to sell more shares than buy during the period, foreign investors stepped up buy orders and slowed down on sell orders.

    Managing Director, APT Securities & Funds Limited Kasimu Garba Kurfi said most foreign investors understand and play better in the Nigerian investment market noting that clearer macroeconomic direction, upbeat crude oil pricing and reduced political risks usually influence foreign investments.

    He, however, added that sell pressure on  domestic investors might not be unconcerned with demand to raise funds to meet financing needs in preparation for resumption of schools. With a trading cycle of four days, most investors find their shares handy in the event of immediate cash requirement.

    Chief Dealer, Globalview Capital Limited, Mr. Aruna Kebira, noted that stability and sustainability could influence foreign portfolio direction.

    Chief Executive Officer, Sofunix Investment and Communications, Mr. Sola Oni, said strong fundamentals and undervaluation of Nigerian equities have made them attractive to investors noting that clearer economic and political directions have further reduced Nigerian macro risks and made Nigerian securities more attractive.

    FPIs had outpaced Nigerian domestic investments in the equities market in 2018, after two-year domination by Nigerian domestic investors. However, FPIs had for most months tended towards outflows. Further analysis showed that for the past 12 years, foreign portfolio investors and Nigerian domestic investors had split the domination of transactions at the Nigerian market equally.

    A year-to-date cumulative assessment also showed that total foreign transactions had reduced from N906.86 billion in first eight months of 2018 to N594.46 billion in first eight months of this year. FPI trend meanwhile was in line with the reduction in total transactions in the Nigerian equities market, which dropped from N1.88 trillion in eight-month period ended August 2018 to N1.32 billion in 2019. Nigerian domestic transactions had also reduced from N728.51 billion by August, last year to N970.31 billion last month.

  • Slow growth, low investment’ll raise poverty, says World Bank

    THE World Bank at the weekend, warned that  slow global growth and sluggish investment in Nigeria and other developing countries would most likely increase poverty and frustrate its goal for poverty alleviation.

    World Bank Group President David Malpass, who gave the warning at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington, DC, United States, said the distributional impact of slower global growth and frozen capital will add to inequality, undercutting the bank’s mission of shared prosperity and rising median incomes.

    He said the world was already facing  slowdown in growth, slowdown in investment, and frozen capital.

    Malpass  said the global slowdown is apparent, adding that in June, the World Bank Group’s Global Economic Prospects (GEP) report lowered estimate for this year’s real global growth to 2.6 per cent.

    “Given recent developments, I expect actual growth to fall short of that. In nominal terms, dollar gross domestic product (GDP) growth looks set to slow to less than three per cent in 2019, a big letdown from six per cent growth in 2017 and 2018.   World dollar GDP reached $84.7 trillion in 2018, of which the U.S. was $20.6 trillion, China $13.6 trillion, the combined five biggest European Union (EU) economies (Germany, the UK, France, Italy and Spain) $13.1 trillion and Japan $5 trillion.

    “The slowdown in global growth is broad based, including slowing growth in China, substantial downturns in Argentina, India, and Mexico, and disappointments in much of the developing world. Some parts of Europe are in recession or close to falling into recession. Germany and the United Kingdom have experienced a quarter of recession, and Italy and Sweden have seen several quarters of stagnation,” he said.

    The World Bank chief said global investment growth decelerated after the global financial crisis from an average of about six per cent between 1992-2007 to about four per cent between 2010 and 2018.

    It said in emerging market and developing economies, average investment growth slowed from about 10per cent per year during 1992-2007 to below six per cent during 2010-2018. Excluding China, average investment growth in other emerging market and developing economies was only about four per cent between 2010-2018 period.

    Malpass said at the same time, over $15 trillion of bonds have zero or negative yields, with some new issues carrying negative yields over the long term. This frozen capital implies slower future growth.  In economic theory, yields should be related to the cost of capital and anticipated return on investment. Low or negative bond yields mean that many pools of capital are accepting the market’s premise of very low or even negative returns for years, even decades.

    “Lack of debt transparency and unsustainable debt loads are problems in a number of countries, especially in Africa. The lack of clean water, dependable electricity and access to roads, basic health care and education still plagues many of our clients.

    “For many emerging markets, the availability of global capital puts added emphasis on reforms that strengthen capital markets and attract capital from their diaspora, who are often the most eager to invest when improvements occur and the most aware of meaningful progress,” Malpass said.

  • National Identity Day

    A charade without National ID Card

    SEQUEL to the Federal Government’s approval of September 16 of every year as National Identity Day, Nigeria is  the first  country to formally adopt the day, otherwise called 16.9, as Identity Day (ID-Day). The approval was communicated to the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) in a letter from the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr Boss Mustapha.

    NIMC’s General Manager, Operations/Corporate Communications, who made this known in a statement said: “In the letter signed on the SGF’s behalf by David K. Gende, the Director, Planning, Research and Statistics in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Mustapha conveyed government’s approval to the NIMC chief executive officer that Nigeria ‘should join the Coalition for International Identity Day,’ in response to the latter’s earlier request. By that approval, therefore, Nigeria becomes the first country in the world to formally adopt September 16, otherwise called 16.9, as Identity Day (ID-Day).”

    Why September 16? Aliyu Aziz, NIMC’s director-general said the choice of the date was in recognition of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 16.9 which calls for a legal identity for all, including birth registration by 2030. According to him, “Many important issues on the international development and human rights agenda have an observance day. For example, 10 December is Human Rights Day, while 20th of June is Refugee Day. Now is the time for identity to have a day of observance.”

    These days, identification is an indispensable tool for national development and social cohesion. Indeed, ID cards are becoming common worldwide, with many countries using them to improve national and international security. The cards are also useful in the fight against identity theft, especially with holder’s biometric features embedded in the cards.

    According to the NIMC, the  “National Identification Number (NIN) is used to tie together all records about you – demographic data, fingerprints, head-to-shoulder facial picture, other biometric data and digital signature – in the National Identity Database making it relatively easy to confirm and verify your identity when you engage in travels and transactions.”

    We welcome the declaration of September 16 as National Identity Day. However, Nigeria should go beyond observing the day for its symbolic significance alone. As a matter of fact, this is the basis of our conditional support for the National Identity Day: its usefulness, at least as far as we are concerned, is in the date being used essentially to sensitise Nigerians on the importance of the identity card. The day should also serve as reminder to those in charge of the cards to ensure an all-year-round availability of the card, devoid of unnecessary bureaucratic bottlenecks.

    Our fear though is whether one can give what one does not have. We ask this question because up till now, only about 37 million Nigerians have the National Identity Card despite the fact that the journey towards making it a reality started as far back as the 1980s in the Alhaji Shehu Shagari years in the Second Republic. The process for the issuance of the card has sadly been corruption-ridden. The processes have gulped billions without commensurate result. If only about 37 million Nigerians have been issued their NIN in a country estimated to be about 170 million, there must be a change of attitude on the part of all stakeholders for the cards to be made available to every qualified Nigerian. If it has taken us this long to make provision for only about a quarter of the population, how long will it take to get every qualified Nigerian covered? This is a poser for the NIMC.

    However, now that the government has approved a National Identity Day for the country, we hope it would put in place all the necessary facilities that would facilitate the issuance of the National Identity Card.  A National Identity Day without identity card is a charade. We hope this is not lost on the government.

  • More retirees opting for annuity plan as insurance gets N371b premium

    There is a growing number of retirees who opt for life annuity to access pension benefits under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). Omobola Tolu-Kusimo reports.

    The insurance industry has received N371.21 billion premium on life annuity for retirees from the pension industry since inception of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) in 2007 till the second quarter of the year.

    The Nation gathered from a report by PenCom that Pension Fund Administrators paid the premium to insurance companies on behalf of retirees who opt for life annuity as their retirement payment mode.

    The Acting Director-General of PenCom, Mrs. Aisha Dahir-Umar in the report stated that the (PFAs) under the supervision of the Commission also made a lump sum payment of N91.28 billion to the insurance companies in the second quarter of the year.

    This showed an increase of N24.74 billion in one year when compared to the N66.46 billion recorded in the same quarter of 2018.

    She said the Commission approved a total of 2,941 applications for retirement under life annuity during the second quarter of 2019, thus  bringing the total number of retirees receiving their retirement benefits through the annuity plan to 68,857 from inception.

    She said the 2,941 retirees received N4.68 billion as lump sum payment and paid premium of N17.53 billion to insurance companies and monthly annuity of N184.50 million.

    Mrs. Dahir-Umar said this resulted in total lump sum payment of N91.28 billion, premium of N371.21 billion and monthly annuity payments of N3.70 billion as at the end of the second quarter, 2019.

    She added that the commission in the second quarter of 2018, approved a total of 2,652 applications for retirement under life annuity during the quarter, bringing the total number of retirees receiving their retirement benefits through the annuity plan to 54,471.

    The 2,652 retirees received N2.56 billion as lump sum payment and paid premium of N14.34 billion to insurance companies. This resulted in total lump sum payment of N66.46 billion and monthly annuity payments of N2.84 billion, she said.

  • ARIAN pushes for property insurance

    The Association of Registered Insurance Agents of Nigeria (ARIAN) has embarked on an insurance walk to sensitise Nigerians on the need to secure their lives and property with insurance.

    Its President, Ademola Ifagbayi who spoke during the ARIAN Insurance Walk 2019 with the theme: Project S3, Secure Child Education/Secure the Future/Save Nigeria, held in Lagos, said the purpose of the walk was to create awareness on insurance in the country, saying that insurance is very important but many people are yet to embrace it.

    He urged Nigerians to plan for their future, children and business by having insurance cover.

    He said: “Whether you like it or not, risk is natural and there is nothing you can do. This year, we are focusing on children education plan. Education is the best legacy that any responsible parent must give to their children because it has become very expensive and many  children are returning back to school.

    “Many children attend private schools, whether primary or secondary including private universities. This is the time parents will be running around to look for how to pay school fees. But with an insurance policy, a parent can plan for their children’s future by making a regular savings on a monthly basis, quarterly basis, even on annual basis depending on  their capacity. If you want your children to be better than you tomorrow, you must give them education. It is also good for you to have insurance for your business whether you are an artisan, or you are working in an organisation.

    “I want you all to know that this insurance policy makes provisions in two ways because I know that plenty people will say why do I need to take insurance because I already have accounts with the banks. Taking an insurance policy is different from having a bank account,” he added.

  • Oil workers seek end to fuel subsidy regime

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), at the weekend, renewed its call on the Federal Government to exit the fuel subsidy regime.

    The group stressed the need for increased local production of petroleum products in the country.

    Speaking with The Nation, its President, Comrade Ndukaku Oheari, said  production could be achieved through the establishment of more refineries and revamping and upgrade of existing ones to end to product importation.

    He said: ”We have been following activities in Port Harcourt Refinery with keen interest as critical stakeholders and looking forward to its eventual extension to Warri and Kaduna Refineries. We have also, in our various submissions and presentation at public fora, recommended the adoption of the NLNG model in addressing the issues of the refineries. NLNG model is likely to address all the inherent challenges anticipated in a government private partnership approach of running the refineries.”

    Oheari commended the managment of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) for rehabilitating and restoring some of its key assets such as tank expansion at Atlas Cove Depot, re-opening of depot facilities at Mosimi, Ibadan, Enugu, Aba and Kano.

    ”We have also appreciated the crude oil tracking initiative which has reduced leakages and crude oil theft. This same technology should be extended to the Pipelines monitoring,” he said.

    He urged the NNPC to cooperate with the National Assembly and the Federal Government to remove the grey areas hindering the smooth passage and signing into law of all the parts of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), stressing that the development will restore investors’ confidence in the country’s oil and gas sector.

    He said with the uncertainty surrounding the passage of the bill to law, investors are wary of long term investment in the industry thereby affecting the creation and retention of jobs which is one of the cardinal principle of the current administration.

    “Aspects of the bill that will revolutionalise the industry, such as the Petroleum Industry Administration Bill, the Petroleum Industry Fiscal Bill and the Petroleum Host and Impacted Community Bill should be vigorously looked into and passed into law in order to restore investors’ confidence,” he said.

    He solicited the support of NNPC to assist his union to curb the recklessness of some key operators whose numbers are growing rapidly, in the struggle against anti-labour practices.

    ”This include short term contracts, usually a year, which can be rolled over for the next 15 to 20 years thereby promoting slave labour as it is difficult to enthrone a working collective bargaining agreement within such a short period, misinterpretation and blatant refusal to honour signed agreements, non-remittances of statutory deductions like pensions and taxes to relevant agencies in fact, outright efforts to prevent or extinguish the presence of unions in such establishments,” he said.

    He lamented that the companies are also notorious in the practice of casualisation, contract staffing, outsourcing and off- shoring of jobs, as well as other unfair labour practices and under hand tactics in their labour relations activities.

  • UNCTAD: Developing nations’ll gain from standardisation

    Wider adoption of voluntary sustainability standards could catalyse progress towards the global goals, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has said.

    Like most things with a stamp of approval, goods and services that enjoy sustainability certification are landing more in the consumer basket, helping traders and consumers care for the environment and make more sustainable choices, it said in a statement.

    These labels and the standards behind them that guarantee that the products you buy do not hurt the environment and the people who make them, can unlock new markets for developing countries, participants at the second International Convention on Sustainable Trade and Standards (ICSTS) heard.

    These sustainability standards can support trade and spur economic growth, while promoting environmental protection and inclusive social development, said UNCTAD’s Santiago Fernández-de-Córdoba, coordinator of the United Nations Forum on Sustainability Standards (UNFSS).

    UNFSS is an inter-agency platform that provides information and analysis on voluntary sustainability standards (VSS) and facilitates discussions about them at the intergovernmental level.

  • Race for more revenue gathers steam

    The Federal Government has been implementing diverse policies designed to raise revenue. The government’s plan to raise Value Added Tax (VAT) from five per cent to 7.5 per cent, imposition of tax on technology firms and banking software manufacturers and the new policy mandating banks to collect five per cent stamp duty on every Point of Sale (PoS) transaction are some of the moves to raise cash to fund N8.9 trillion 2019 budget and other infrastructure projects. COLLINS NWEZE examines the new policy and its implications for businesses and the economy

    The Federal Government and its agencies have not hidden their thirst for more revenue. From new campaigns to deepen tax and revenue nets to regulations in banking sector to get customers pay more for banking services, there is a new drive to mobilise funds to provide the requisite infrastructure that will catalyse the economy.

    The proposal by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) to raise Value Added Tax (VAT)  from five per cent to 7.5 per cent  has  continued to generate varied reactions from stakeholders in the economy.

    While the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) believes the raise will spike inflation and affect people’s purchasing power,  the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN) says the increase was long overdue and should be commended because  it will help government realise its developmental objectives.

    Before the policy, government also took major steps to tax technological firms. Government is targeting the  Nigerian digital economy which is worth  $88 billion  with capacity to create three million jobs by 2021 but it is largely untaxed. It is looking at getting more taxes from multinational companies such as Google,  Apple, Twitter, Amazon, Facebook, Uber, eBay and banking software manufacturers by developing framework that will get them pay taxes locally. Achieving that will however require new tax laws that capture their mode of operations.

    These firms deploy the  Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) rule to shift profits from the spots where economic activity and value creation occur into low or no-tax locations. The practice and absence of  suitable tax laws have constrained  the Nigerian tax authorities from taxing the digital economy.  The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) is engaging the National Assembly to amend the tax laws to align with changing technology advancement and halt tax revenue leakages from the digital space.

    It is beleived that a large part of government revenue will come from this segment of the economy. Millions of Nigerians that make purchases for goods and services online from entities that have no physical presence in the country deny government the much-needed tax revenue. Google, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, Uber, eBay, anti-virus firms and banking software providers among others, fall within the digital economy space.  They employ thousands of workers to check every loophole that will enable them evade taxes. They also retain the services of the big accounting and global law firms with the sole aim of driving down the rate of tax they pay wherever they operate or their goods are sold.

    Tax-motivated profit shifting of this kind has risen up the multilateral agenda since the 2007-2008 global financial crisis, with organisations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) pointing to ample evidence that it is taking place. Estimates of the global scale of annual public revenues lost to profit shifting vary. One recent estimate  put global losses from corporate tax avoidance at about $500 billion yearly, with developing countries, including Nigeria hardest hit.

    Traditionally, discussions about who pays tax and where have been based on two models: residence taxation and source taxation. The former holds that people and companies should contribute to the public services provided for them by the country where they reside and that this tax applies to all their income, no matter where it comes from. The latter holds that the country providing the opportunity to generate income or profits should have the right to levy tax.

     

    CBN wades in

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) came out with a new policy mandating banks to take N50 stamp duty fee on every Point of Sale (PoS) transaction.

    The directive on the Unbundling of Merchant Settlement Amounts was contained in the CBN circular to all banks, processors and switches titled: Review of Process for Merchants Collections on Electronic Transactions.

    The new policy requires that instead of Stamp Duties Payment on aggregate transaction, the charges  will now be taken on individual transaction that occur on PoS.

    The circular signed by CBN Director, Payments System Management Department,  Sam Okojere,  authorised banks to unbundle merchant settlement amounts and charge applicable taxes and duties on individual transactions as stipulated by the regulators.

    Merchant Service Charge was also reviewed downward from 0.75 per cent capped at N1,200 to 0.50 per cent capped at N1,000.

    The CBN and Nigeria Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS) are working closely, including setting remittance processes that ensure that the stamp duty charge for PoS is collected.

    In an NIBSS report titled: Returns on Stamp Duty Collection for Merchant Transactions, the payment agency said the new stamp duty payment plan is in line with the provision of the Stamp Duties Act and Federal Government Financial Regulation 2009.

    The policy, it added, was aimed at ensuring strict adherence to the CBN guideline on the subject, collection and Remittance of Statutory Charges on receipts to Nigeria Postal Service under the Stamp Duties Act dated  January 15, 2016.

    The procedural processing guide for stamp dutycharges for PoS, web merchant and all deposit money banks (DMBs) should download daily PoS/Web settlement report from their respective processors settlement file transfer portal.

     

    N8.9tr budget funding

    The N8.9 trillion 2019 budget needs adequate funding for it to achieve the desired results.

    Report from Afrinvest West Africa, showed that the oil price assumption was kept at $60/barrel, which  it believes is conservative, as Brent crude oil price has recently increased due to moderating oil supply due to Iran sanctions and Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) output cuts which have brought the average daily oil price to $63.5/b as at May this year.

    “The oil production assumption of 2.3mb/d is ambitious as we expect 2.1mb/d in 2019 and the official exchange rate of N305/$ was kept, consistent with the CBN’s stance. These assumptions translate to a projected oil revenue of N3.7 trillion as against (N3 trillion in 2018), which we believe is unrealisable due to the repayment of cash call arrears, petrol subsidies and the prospect of lower than expected oil production. The projected non-oil revenue was unchanged at N1.4 trillion in 2019, reflecting a more measured expectation,” the report said.

    The report explained that the largest share of non-oil revenue at 57.7 per cent is expected to be generated from Companies Income Tax (CIT) while 21.8 per cent and 16.6 per cent are to be collected through Customs and Excise Duties and VAT respectively. Meanwhile, independent revenue is projected lower at N624.6 billion lower than last year’s figure of N848 billion.

    “While this shows that the Federal Government is finally being realistic, we expect this to be below projections. Overall, considering that the Federal Government collected an estimated N3.7 trillion in 2018, we expect sustained underperformance in revenue by as much as 41.2 per cent in 2019,” analysts at Afrinvest said.

    This year, total recurrent expenditure is projected at N6.9 trillion, crowding out capital spending which is 30 per cent of total spending.

    “While the Federal Government’s projects fiscal deficit stands at N1.9 trillion or 1.4 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), our estimates of N4.8 trillion and 3.4 per cent respectively shows that this is likely to be worse than expected. The implication of a much wider fiscal deficit would be both higher than expected borrowing and partial implementation of the already poor capital spending,” the report added.

     

    Stakeholders react

    President, Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN) Dame Olajumoke Simplice said despite the planned VAT raise, Nigeria’s VAT is still one of the lowest in the world, adding that she expected the new rate to be pegged at  7.5 per cent or 10 per cent.

    According to her, the last VAT review was 25 years ago. She said the country  also has the lowest VAT rate in Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) sub-region.

    According to the CITN chief, VAT review should take place every five years.

    “VAT is a tax on consumption and is only paid when you consume goods or pay for services. Nigeria’s decision to raise VAT is good for its trade relations with other countries. Besides, VAT is very easy to collect and should be utilised for the development of the economy,” she said.

    Simplice said government should also be held accountable on what the funds from VAT are spent, adding that the funds should be judiciously used for developmental projects.

    According to her, the new VAT rate will increase prices of goods, but is unlikely to affect manufacturers because they will pass the increased prices of goods to consumers.

    Simplice advised tax payers to form pressure groups to monitor tax revenue spending and ensure accountability on the part of government.

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has consistently advised Nigeria to raise its VAT and channel the funds to developmental projects and budget funding.

    At the conclusion of the Funds 2018 Article IV Consultation with Nigeria, its Executive Board emphasised the need for a growth-friendly fiscal adjustment, which front-loads non-oil revenue mobilisation and rationalises current expenditure to reduce the ratio of interest payments to revenue to a more sustainable level and create space for priority social and infrastructure spending.

    The board said: “In addition to ongoing efforts to improve tax administration, directors underlined the need for more ambitious tax policy measures, including through reforming VAT, increasing excises, and rationalising tax incentives.”

    Speaking on tax reforms at the Fiscal Monitor Session of the event, IMF Assistant Director, Fiscal Affairs Department, Cathy Pattillo, said tax reform in the country is very important issue.

    She said IMF’s main recommendation for Nigeria is the need for a comprehensive tax reform that would sustainably increase non-oil revenue.

    “And the reason why that is needed is that Nigeria has one of the lowest ratios of non-oil revenue to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at around 3.4 per cent in the world. And the total tax revenue to GDP at six per cent is also very low compared to peers,” she said.

    According to her, the interest to tax ratio is low, adding that the funds realised should be spent on important developmental projects such as infrastructure and human capital. She also advised the Federal Government to increase excise taxes, and begin aggressive streamlining of tax incentives and exemptions.

    Speaking on the new VAT raise rate proposal, which is expected to take effect after the relevant law has been passed, the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) described the timing of the increase as inappropriate.

    The group said the step will also spur spontaneous increase in inflation rate occasioned by increase in prices of goods and services.

    MAN said although, it appreciates the need for the government to generate more revenue to fund its developmental initiatives amidst declining revenue from oil, increasing the VAT at this time was inappropriate, especially at a time when the minimum wage of N30, 000 was just agreed upon.

    A statement by MAN Director-General Segun Ajayi-Kadir said the increase 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.

    Also speaking on taxation and need to diversify the country’s revenue base, Executive Chairman, Foundation for Economic Research and Training, Prof Akpan Ekpo, said  Federal Government’s revenue is dependent on oil.

    He said: “I call the oil revenue exogenous revenue because you have no control over the price and you are not even in control of the output. You cannot use that to finance long-term development. You should see it as a windfall and use it as such, as they did in Norway. We have not done that over the years. So we must diversify the economy into other areas so that we can earn foreign exchange from other sources outside the oil sector.

    “Another way of making money is to look at the tax structure. I am not saying we should increase tax rate, but we need to bring more people into the tax net. A lot of Nigerians who are wealthy or rich do not pay tax, you have to bring them into the tax net.  Then you have to tax luxury goods heavily. For example, if you go to Abuja and Lagos airports, the number of private jets that you see, they should pay tax.  People will not like to hear this, our VAT rate is the lowest in the world. If you tinker with VAT to even 6.5 per cent, that will generate a lot of revenue. So, those are the areas, because right now the government needs liquidity to do a lot of things,” he said.

    According to Ekpo,  who was immediate past Director-General, West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management (WAIFEM), it is good to tax people.

     

    Understanding digital economy

    Digital services often result in consumers in one country receiving a product or service without the supplier of that product or service being physically present in the country.

    Already, the question of how the increasingly digital economy will be taxed is under discussion by revenue authorities, multinational entities and advisory bodies alike around the world.

    The debate is even getting louder in Nigeria, where the FIRS is working with the National Assembly to amend the tax laws to ensure that revenue from technology companies are captured.

    The FIRS  Executive Chairman, Babatunde Fowler, said the agency will soon begin VAT collection on online transactions.

    Speaking during a FIRS stakeholders retreat in Lagos, with the  theme: Parliamentary Support for Effective Taxation of the Digital Economy, he said the digitilisation of the economy is considered to be a major stimulant to growth, development and innovation.

    He said online and cross-border transactions requiring little or no physical presence have transformed world trade. The digitalisation of the economy has also created a big challenge for taxation as most local laws are not robust enough to address the complexities created by the new digital economy.

    Fowler said there are plans for banks to act as collecting agents for VAT on online transactions for purchase of goods and services done by multinational tech giants without physical presence in the country. The agency is also working with the National Assembly to get the tax laws amended to that effect.

    The FIRS chief said a number of countries have made new regulations, adding that the bill on the amendment of of the tax laws will be brought the Senate to enable the country move fast in tapping tax revenue opportunities in the digital economy.

    He said the country needed to start from the basics, adding that banks should help the government is harnessing tax revenue from the digital economy. “I support the idea of using the banks to extract tax revenue from the digital economy. Let’s review the activities of banks as it relates to the digital economy and check areas that require legislation. The banks need to be engaged to help government collect the taxes from the digital economy,” the FIRS chief said.

    He said FIRS generated N5.3 trillion last year, which is N1.4 trillion deficit against the N6.7 trillion it targeted for the year.

    But in spite of the shortfall, the 2018 figure showed an increase of N1.3 trillion or 32 per cent over the N4.03 trillion generated in 2017. Data presented by the agency on the occasion showed that it generated revenue comprises of N2.5 trillion from oil tax revenue and N2.8 trillion from non-oil tax revenue.

    He said: “In the 2019 budget, the target for FIRS is within the region of N8 trillion and with other arms of government support, we believe we can achieve it.”

    Associate Director, Andersen Tax, Ogochukwu Isiadinso, explained that since non-resident companies are taxed in Nigeria based on profits derived from Nigeria, the question as to whether a foreign company is liable to income tax in Nigeria is usually controversial.

    Section 13 of Companies Income Tax Act (CITA) implies that a non-resident company must have physically performed activities in Nigeria, directly or indirectly, before such a company can be liable to income tax in Nigeria. For instance, where a software company provides online data to users in Nigeria without being physically present in Nigeria in any form, it may be difficult to conclude that such a company is liable to CIT in Nigeria, although the company could have derived income from the country.

    “A major challenge is therefore determining at what point such non-resident would be deemed to have carried on business in Nigeria and therefore liable to income tax in Nigeria. Also,  customers that complete transactions on online platforms may not be aware of the exact location of the digital goods and services they are consuming. In some instances, the jurisdiction may be in dispute as the location of the seller can be different from the location of the goods being sold.

    “To ensure digital companies do not escape tax in Nigeria, the FIRS has often required Nigerian companies to withhold tax on all payments made to non-resident persons regardless of the non-establishment of the tax presence specified under Section 13 of CITA. This requirement has encountered resistance from taxpayers given that such non-resident persons may not be liable to tax under Nigerian laws,” she said.

    Partner & Head Consumer and Industrial Markets KPMG Nigeria, Tayo Ogungbenro, said  digital economy is the combination of several general purpose technologies and the range of economic and social activities carried out by people over the internet and related technologies.

    “The digital economy encompasses physical infrastructure like broadband lines, routers, computers, smartphones, – the applications they power (Google, Salesforce), the functionality they provide ( data analytics, cloud computing) among others. It is expected generate up to $88 billion and three million jobs by 2021.

  • Cargo air freight dips by 70%

    The volume of cargoes into the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos has dropped by 70 per cent, it was gathered at the weekend.

    The reduction is due largely to the state of the economy.

    Besides economic factors, it was gathered that many cargo airlines are diverting from Nigeria because of prohibitive air navigation and airport charges.

    Many airlines, it was gathered, now resort to diverting their non-time bound cargo to the seaports because of the huge cost of freight using the air mode of transportation.

    Confirming the development, Association of Foreign Airlines Representatives in Nigeria (AFARN) President, Mr Kingsley Nwokoma said increasing cost of freight by air is forcing importers to consider other options of moving their goods.

    He said players in the air freight value chain were losing clients to the seaports because there were faster ships which can deliver heavy duty machinery, furniture and other items that are not pressed for time.

    Nwakoma said airlines involved in cargo freighting have reduced their flight frequency from three to four times weekly to one in a week, as a direct effect of the state of the economy.

    He said the Ease of Doing Business directive rolled out by Federal Government has not impacted positively on the cargo and allied value chain.

    Another factor he cited for reduction in cargo airfreight is the difficulty carriers face in getting out bound goods to fly back to either Europe, Asia or United States because some clients prefer pocket-friendlier modes of freighting their carges.

    Nwakoma said: “The interplay in the economy is affecting air cargo business. The aviation sector is losing clients to the seaports because clients are now looking for avenues to cut cost .

    “You know air freight is very expensive, that is one of the reasons clients now move their cargoes that are not time bound to the seaports.

    “In the last one year,  it has dropped significantly by 70 per cent. Cargo aircraft coming into the country has also reduced.”

    He, however called for improvement in airport facilities and reduction in  air navigation charges to attract more players in the sector.

  • Stinking secretariat

    IF it is true that there is a strong connection between cleanliness and efficiency, then it is obvious that the filth, waste and decrepitude of Phase II of the Federal Secretariat in Abuja are clear reflections of the ineffectiveness for which the Nigerian civil service is notorious.

    Phase II is the epicentre of the Federal Civil Service. It houses the offices of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, the ministries of information and culture, science and technology, special duties and intergovernmental affairs, and the housing sector of the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing. It also accommodates the Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals, the Office of the Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, and the Bureau of Public Service Reforms.

    Tragically, the poor state of the complex stands in stark contrast to its critical importance to policy formulation and national development. Its gleaming exterior conceals a sorry tale of non-functioning lifts, clogged drainage systems and foul toilets, all testifying to a virtually non-existent maintenance culture, which contradicts any claims to efficiency.

    Lifts, essential in an 11-storey complex, are either non-functioning or restricted. This compels workers and visitors to resort to the stairs, despite the obvious challenges it poses. Toilets are similarly unavailable; most are locked up and few meet the sanitary standards expected of any workplace, to say nothing of the headquarters of the Federal Civil Service.

    In July 2018, the Federal Government signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with a construction firm for the renovation of the ground floor and car parks in Block A of Phase II. One thousand office spaces and 800 parking spaces were to be created in a pilot project that was to set the template for a more extensive programme of rehabilitation. The project was due for completion in January this year, but the present dilapidation of the complex clearly shows that its objectives have not been met.

    If Phase II of the Federal Secretariat in the country’s national capital is so poorly maintained, the condition of the various federal secretariat buildings across the country which are farther away from the seat of power do not bear thinking about.

    The implications for the nation are obvious. A Federal Civil Service that cannot keep its own toilets clean is unlikely to be the driver of national growth that it is supposed to spearhead. A Federal Secretariat whose lifts are non-functional cannot superintend the upliftment of society that is its prime directive. Ministries, agencies and departments that are unable to ensure a conducive working environment for themselves clearly lack the capacity to create it in their areas of responsibility.

    Any attempt to reform the Federal Civil Service must start from the proper maintenance of its buildings. The 2018 National Budget appropriated N239,016,098 for the rehabilitation of Phase II of the Federal Secretariat Complex. An additional N76,970,237 was budgeted for the retrofitting of buildings in the housing sector of the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing, and three other federal secretariats. Another N34,636,606 was also set aside for the rehabilitation of fire prevention and fighting systems in the Federal Secretariat Complex.

    Exactly how were these funds spent? Who oversaw the various projects and signed them off? If there were any discrepancies, why were they not thoroughly dealt with? A closer monitoring of the maintenance budget for the Federal Secretariat Complex is vital to ensuring that it is used for what it is meant for.

    The reporting system in the Federal Civil Service also needs to be overhauled. Apart from the various laid-down procedures for handling complaints as specified in the Civil Service Handbook, the secretariat has several units of the Service Compact With All Nigerians (SERVICOM) agency. What have they done about the complaints they must have received about non-functioning and dilapidated facilities in the Federal Secretariat Complex?

    A nation cannot transcend the limitations of its civil service. If Nigeria’s development process is to truly take off, it must start by ensuring that its civil servants are able to work in a conducive environment.