Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,148,792 members, 7,802,510 topics. Date: Friday, 19 April 2024 at 03:37 PM

No Hiding Place For Tax Defaulters In Nigeria – FIRS - Business - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Business / No Hiding Place For Tax Defaulters In Nigeria – FIRS (167 Views)

GIGM To FIRS: Expunge Our Name From List Of Tax Defaulters / Tax Defaulters: Oyo Govt Seals Banks In Ibadan / In New Revenue Drive, FIRS Targets Billionaire Tax Defaulters (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

No Hiding Place For Tax Defaulters In Nigeria – FIRS by innerkonsult1: 3:05pm On Sep 18, 2019
In a bid to widen the tax net and upscale Nigeria’s revenue, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has come up with policies that would aid in fishing out companies and individuals that have over time defaulted in paying taxes. That was after the tax authority on Tuesday disclosed it has developed a common tax identity and it’s working closely with banks operating in the country in line with its statutory powers to ensure that tax evaders comply.
“We are working in synergy with the banks at the moment and at present, we have access to everybody’s account, so there is no hiding place for tax evaders in the country. All we need to do is request information about any individual or company and we will get it,” said Ikechukwu Odume, FIRS General Counsel. Odume, who made this disclosure at the sideline of the ongoing 2019 Annual Conference organized by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Lagos, also noted that in other to drive full compliance, the FIRS developed and launched the Common National Tax Identity. “With the click of a button, we can have the tax number of every person so if you say you pay taxes we would know,” Ndume told Businessday. Africa’s largest economy, with a gross domestic product of $380.85 billion, has Tax-to-gdp ratio of 5.6 percent, one of the lowest in the continent, according to data from World Bank. Tax-to-gdp ratio in Algeria, South Africa, Morocco, Angola, Kenya and Egypt currently stands at 34.75; 26.80; 21.35; 19.25; 18 and 15.20 percent, respectively. In a show of dire need for revenue to fund the budget, the federal government through the Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari, queried the FIRS Boss, Babatunde Fowler, to provide explanation on the widening variance between actual revenue and budgeted from 2015 to 2018. In 2015, actual revenue collection by the agency was N3.7 trillion, compared with a budgeted target of N4.5 trillion, set by the federal government for the tax regulator. A similar shortfall occurred in 2016, when actual collection was N3.307 trillion, less than the N4.95 trillion targeted in the budget. Also, in 2017, the FIRS collected a total of N4.027 trillion, less than the set target of N4.89 trillion and in 2018, actual collection was N5.3 trillion, while the budgeted target was N6,7 trillion In response to the query, Fowler blamed the shortfall in actual revenue to dwindling economic activities from the fall out of a global collapse in crude oil prices that submerged the country’s economy into five quarters of negative contraction. To shore up revenue, the tax regulatory agency embarked on several aggressive strategies within is purview including placing a “lien” in the form of suspension on the bank account of defaulting tax payers. The FIRS released a public memo naming over 20,000 businesses that are yet to remit taxes into its coffers. It has also announced plans of taking a 5 percent Value Added Taxes (VAT) on all purchases done online from 1st January 2020. In response to controversy on how the tax regulator plans on axing online savvy customers, Nudume affirmed that the 5 percent would be collected directly from the bank accounts of the users differently from the VAT already charged by the ecommerce firm. “What we are trying to achieve for the online transaction is equity in tax. So, whether you buy goods online or physically, you will pay VAT,” Udeme said in an exclusive interview with Businessday. He noted that the FIRS was building a network of collaboration with the various tax authorities at the state level so there could be some kind of interchange of information on people paying tax so as to eliminate he issues of multiplicity of taxes. The collaboration between both arms have also resulted in the establishment of a Joint Tax Audit (JTA), where the federal and the state government tax authority, come together to audit companies, Udeme noted “We can know what is happening in states across the federation. For example, a company in Lagos may have employees in Ogun state and should pay tax in Ogun state but they work in Lagos. With the JTA, we should be able to ascertain how many of these companies’ tax should go to Ogun state, Lagos state and those that should go to the FIRS,” he said. According to Udeme, the FIRS has also come up with a National Tax Policy, that would help in driving he vision of the agency and remove every bottleneck hindering effective tax payment by taxpayers. For the agency, the National Tax Policy is the spirit that drives tax laws and reforms as it helps in detecting where tax is going, the things that the agency want in the tax, avoiding multiple taxation, efficiency in tax administration so that each government looks at it as a guide towards the laws that they are making. At the conference, Udeme urged lawyers on the need to buy into tax laws as they should be the ones driving tax reforms in the country. The FIRS representative expressed dissatisfaction, noting that over time, judges have a major impediment to the agency’s efforts in tax collection in the country as many of them fail to intensively study tax laws. He explained that the FIRS has shown enough empathy in tax collection if the powers given to the agency is anything to consider.

Source: Business day

Contact InnerKonsult for Professional Services on Tax, Accountancy and CAC Services. O8038460036, www.innerkonsult.com
Re: No Hiding Place For Tax Defaulters In Nigeria – FIRS by SLAP44: 3:09pm On Sep 18, 2019
I think they should place Osinbajo as head tax collector grin
Re: No Hiding Place For Tax Defaulters In Nigeria – FIRS by Badmanlalajoshi(m): 3:09pm On Sep 18, 2019
Fools

(1) (Reply)

How Can Someone Be A Finisher? / Foreign Language / Call Us For Ur Electrical Work, Solar Energy And Inverter

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 18
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.