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EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit - Business - Nairaland

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Nigeria’s Official Exchange Rate To Hit N1,068/$ By 2025 – EIU / Ahmed: FG Plans To Raise VAT To 7.5% By 2020 / FG Urged To Raise VAT To 7% (2) (3) (4)

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EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Islie: 1:47am On Mar 19
*Predicts naira to weaken to N1,770/$ at year-end, declares may achieve relative stability at N1,817/$ in 2025

*Says aggressive monetary policy tightening key to stronger currency, foresees further rate hike in 2024 amid inflationary concerns, MPR may fall to 12.5% in 2026

*Predicts further exits of FDIs in 2024 amid naira losses




The federal government is expected to raise the Value Added Tax (VAT) to 15 per cent from the current 7.5 per cent by 2027 to enable it fund its fiscal deficit and debt service obligations, including social and job creation projects. International business research firm, Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), stated this in its Country Report.

EIU said the deficit could widen to five per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2024, slightly above the estimate for 2023. It said this was expected to average 4.5 per cent of GDP annually between 2025 and 2028 – more than the legal limit of three per cent of GDP and representing an unusually lax period of fiscal policy for the country.On the foreign exchange (FX) regime, EIU predicted the naira to weaken to N2, 381 to the dollar, stating that the spread with the parallel market will be five per cent to 15 per cent.


The report added that persistently high inflation, deficit monetisation, negative short-term real interest rates, low foreign reserves, and a backlog of foreign-exchange orders would continue to sap confidence in the naira, despite a 45 per cent devaluation in February.It said traders will continue to be concerned that controls on the currency could be tightened at any point, adding, however, that another step devaluation is unlikely.

The report forecasted foreign borrowing to be used to rebuild foreign reserves and said the local currency would stabilise towards the end of 2024.It pointed out that given that the naira was increasingly appearing undervalued in real terms, the rate could end up stronger if the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) tightened monetary policy more aggressively than expected.

EIU further predicted a fresh 100 basis points hike in Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) to 23.75 per cent from the current 22.75 per cent in 2024, should deficit monetisation continue and imported inflationary pressures remain strong.“However, our core view is that the CBN will fail to deliver a positive real short-term interest rate, as doing so would cause unemployment at a high political cost.”The report stated, “Accounting for further near-term losses, we expect an end-2024 rate of N1, 770: $1, compared with about N1, 600: US$1 at end-February. However, this forecast is finely balanced.

“Any number of knocks to confidence could cause a sharper weakening. Alternatively, given the naira is increasingly appearing undervalued in real terms, the rate could end up stronger, if the CBN tightens monetary policy more aggressively than we expect.”EIU stated in the report that following a sizable real-terms correction, naira’s outlook for 2025 was relatively stable, and might close at N1, 817 to the dollar in the review year.

Nonetheless, the EIU report said, “We maintain our view that a lax monetary-fiscal policy mix will undermine the longer-term value of the naira. In line with a slide in world oil prices from a cyclical peak, we forecast that the currency will end 2028 at N2, 381: $1 and that the spread with the parallel market will be 5-15 per cent.”

The report further predicted the country’s foreign exchange reserves to gradually rise over the forecast period, aided by a more market-driven exchange rate system and greater access to foreign borrowing. It added, however, that this would still provide only about seven months of import cover in 2028.In addition, the report stated that an expected rise in formal borrowing would cause the public debt/GDP ratio to rise sharply in 2024-28. It predicted that a statutory 40 per cent ceiling would be breached by end of 2026, pushing public debt to GDP to 50.4 per cent by 2028, from less than 20 per cent in 2022.The report said, “We expect relatively large budget deficits as a consequence of Mr. Tinubu’s ‘fiscally active’ job creation and infrastructure spending agenda, as well as an implicit subsidy on petrol.“The 2024 budget includes a large increase in non-debt recurrent spending as high inflation necessitates higher public-sector salaries and cash transfers to poor households.”

The report forecasted inflation to average 30.3 per cent in 2024, from 24.7 per cent in 2023, reflecting the fact that petrol price increases in June 2023 will drop out of the year-on-year calculation from mid-2024, and prevent the rate from being even higher.It stated, “Assuming the naira stabilises, average inflation should fall to 20.7 per cent in 2025 and 11.7 per cent in 2028.“Inflation will, thus, remain well above the 6-9 per cent target range throughout the forecast period, owing to expected VAT rate increases, insecurity in agricultural regions (raising food prices), Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit, periodic monetisation of fiscal deficits, currency weakness, and a general inflation bias within economic policymaking. ”The report said following the recent hike in MPR by 400 basis points, to 22.75 per cent in February, and the cash reserve requirement by 1,200 basis points, “Another 100 basis points is likely to be added to the policy rate in 2024, assuming deficit monetisation continues and imported inflationary pressures remain strong.”It added, “The CBN has mentioned a switch to inflation targeting, but as this would rub up against government economic policy and given the CBN’s record of unorthodox policy, such a framework would have little credibility in anchoring inflation expectations.“The MPC attaches a large weight to economic growth, and policy will be subject to political interference.

Assuming inflation falls from 2025, we expect the CBN to begin unwinding its tight stance, with rate cuts beginning early in that year, despite inflation remaining above the ceiling of the CBN’s 6-9 per cent target range.“We expect the policy rate to fall to 12.5 per cent in 2026 and remain there throughout the remainder of the forecast period. ”The EIU report predicted real GDP growth to slide from 2.9 per cent in 2023 to 2.5 per cent in 2024. It explained, “Given population growth of about 2.4 per cent, this will mean continued stagnation in GDP per head. Sluggish growth reflects a surge in already high inflation, expected monetary tightening and balance-sheet constraints facing multinationals that earn in local currency, given the naira’s collapse. “Rising insecurity in Nigeria’s agricultural heartlands also makes it improbable that a strong harvest in 2023 will be repeated in 2024.“Net exports will be the primary growth driver in 2024, supported by the constraining impact on imports of the recent large currency devaluation and by higher crude output as the government gets a better handle on oil theft in the Niger Delta and as the Dangote refinery ramps up capacity. “As inflation falls and monetary policy becomes expansionary from 2025, domestic demand will return to (low) growth.

Consequently, real GDP growth will quicken to 3.5 per cent in 2025—the second highest rate in a decade, owing partly to rebound effects—and average 3.3 per cent a year in 2026-28. Factors such as power outages, rampant insecurity, a lack of land titling and a giant infrastructure gap will hold back the economy.”On policy trends, the report pointed out that market reforms under President Bola Tinubu were intended to attract investment but did not constitute a coherent plan. It said, “His two flagship policies, the elimination of petrol subsidies and the liberalisation of the exchange rate, have an inner contradiction. As Nigeria imports virtually all its fuel, devaluations of the naira, the latest being a 45 per cent drop in February, should be reflected in the pump price.

“However, owing to the threat of industrial action there has been little movement since June, despite the naira having weakened from N461:$1 in May 2023 to N1, 600:$1 in late February 2024.“This indicates the return of a (large) subsidy. Denying this publicly, the government has a strong incentive to turn to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for financing to cover the fiscal cost. ”EIU continued, “Deficit monetisation and high inflation will undermine the currency. A possibility is that monetary policy will be tightened to a point at which foreign investors view the naira more favourably.

“Although the CBN raised its policy rate in February, Mr. Tinubu has expressed an aversion to high interest rates as his overarching economic goal is to double GDP by 2031. As inflation has been allowed to rise to a level at which a positive real short-term interest rate would create a significant rise in unemployment—adding another policy-induced element to economic hardship we assume that politics will prevent this from happening.”The report said, “The CBN’s independence has been heavily eroded in recent years; because fiscal firepower is so limited, the government will continue to rely on monetary policy to achieve job-creation and development objectives.”It said, “Our view is that it will take foreign borrowing to rebuild the CBN’s buffers, fully clear a backlog of unmet foreign exchange orders and restore confidence.“This is probably only achievable towards the end of 2024. In mid-January Nigeria took out a $3.3 billion loan from the African Export-Import Bank, secured on oil revenue in a so-called crude oil prepayment facility.“This follows a $1 billion loan from the African Development Bank in November, and another US$1.5bn is being sought from the World Bank. Falling risk premiums on government international bonds make tapping the international capital market another viable (albeit costly) option once US interest rates start to fall from the second half of 2024.“For most of this year, the naira will be highly volatile, leading to regulatory erraticism that can affect businesses, especially those holding foreign currency. The CBN lacks the liquidity to support the naira itself; out of $33 billion in foreign reserves, a large share (estimated at nearly $20 billion), is committed to various derivative deals.“The CBN recently imposed restrictions on oil companies repatriating export earnings abroad, and there is a risk of wider convertibility limits being imposed until the currency stabilises.”Furthermore, the report described the new 650,000-barrel/day Dangote mega-refinery as another possible circuit breaker for the country. It said the facility was gearing up for its first fuel exports, to be followed by cargoes to the domestic market.It said, “In theory, the facility can meet all domestic needs but petrol subsidies make it unclear whether doing so will be profitable (let alone profit maximising).“In any case, Nigeria will continue to depend on fuel imports for most of the year as the refinery ramps up output. The wider business environment will remain highly challenging, undermined by corruption, cronyism, rampant insecurity and a giant infrastructure gap.“Multinationals are increasingly deciding to quit Nigeria or reduce their presence; we estimate there was a net withdrawal of foreign direct investment in 2023, to be repeated in 2024 as naira losses exert pressure on balance sheets carrying large foreign liabilities.”The report also stated regarding the huge exit of investors, “The exodus includes oil majors who are selling onshore assets, which are high-cost and vulnerable to insecurity, leading to indigenisation of the sector over time.“Although in principle this is positive for foreign exchange accumulation, local companies will be unable to match the investing power of outgoing multinationals. We forecast that crude oil production will rise from 1.23m barrels/day (b/d) in 2023 to 1.48m b/d in 2028, although this remains about 250,000 b/d below the 2019 level.”

https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2024/03/18/eiu-report-fg-to-raise-vat-to-15-by-2027-to-fund-fiscal-deficit

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Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by atiku4President(m): 2:20am On Mar 19
My own be say they should try and give Reno Omokri one small appointment make em use hold body before Obi matter go roast am this hard times

20 Likes 1 Share

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Northernblood8(m): 2:24am On Mar 19
IMF puppet. Taxing nigeria to death so that Akpabio and Gbanjamila can have enough to share around to their conies.

I don't expect someone that licks Microphone to do better sha

31 Likes 1 Share

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Yankee101: 2:25am On Mar 19
Tinubu should remove himself if he can’t govern
This is not Lagos state where everything is taxes
You can’t pay workers 100k minimum wage but you want to still collect the little people make

13 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Foreverly02: 2:48am On Mar 19
atiku4President:
My own be say they should try and give Reno Omokri one small appointment make em use hold body before Obi matter go roast am this hard times
Exactly

1 Like

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Ofunaofu: 2:58am On Mar 19
sad
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by osuofia2(m): 8:51am On Mar 19
Tinubu why? what is Nigerian offence?

1 Like

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by NaijaSumigan: 8:51am On Mar 19
Every Nigerian Politician who led this Nation Nigeria to this present state shall weep over everything that brings joy to them.

They shall shed tears of sorrow over their families and loved ones before this year 2024 runs out as GOD ALMIGHTY LIVES.

5 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by stano2(m): 8:52am On Mar 19
More more for polithievcians to pocket

2 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by id4sho(m): 8:53am On Mar 19
Tinubu, master of taxation sad
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by CartelKenneth: 8:53am On Mar 19
Yankee101:
Tinubu should remove himself if he can’t govern
This is not Lagos state where everything is taxes
You can’t pay workers 100k minimum wage but you want to still collect the little people make


In a sane country tinubu will be removed forcefully from government

He might even be hanged in public town square sef

4 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by ClearFlair: 8:53am On Mar 19
This is not even funny.
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Brendaniel: 8:54am On Mar 19
We warned them about Tinubu, they did not listen, some of them don't still know the evil they have done and still doing by supporting Tinubu

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by oz4real83(m): 8:56am On Mar 19
Most Nigerians are cowards, the recent revelations concerning the legislature is enough reason to ground this country to a stand still, even if VAT is increased by 100%, they will loot it through frivolous and criminal activities.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by villagereporter(m): 8:56am On Mar 19
NaijaSumigan:
Every Nigerian Politician who led this Nation Nigeria to this present state shall weep over everything that brings joy to them.

They shall shed tears of sorrow over their families and loved ones before this year 2024 runs out as GOD ALMIGHTY LIVES.
.


Amen Amen AMEN

5 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by morikee: 8:58am On Mar 19
More hardship loading 💔

4 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by BigBashiru: 8:59am On Mar 19
EIU report if you look closely is run by Europeans directly or by proxy. Unfortunately most blacks are brainwashed by media etc to worship Europeans. They just implemented European recommendations without question. They want to make it like western countries where ppl are taxed to death. 15% tax is too much.
Blacks sha. No sense at all.

6 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by proeast(m): 8:59am On Mar 19
Tinubu is really destroying Nigeria and making it worse than Buhari. However, his people are still supporting him due to tribalism.

Nigeria is a hopeless dungeon!

5 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by 004gist: 9:00am On Mar 19
sad

Always advising FG to raise tax, stop subsidies but they have never advised FG or block policians from bringing stolen funds to their banks in Europe and UK or stop them fromm buying properties in their countries

They will never condemn and reject shame elections. They will never condemned excessive borrowing.

6 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Blazetrailer: 9:05am On Mar 19
First off, I believe these predictions more than any rubbish that comes from CBN or Nigerian govt.

I said this sometime in one other posts, if Nigerians had an iota of idea of the shit the country is, the streets will be awash with protests to force this administration to act more prudently and thoughtfully on economic decisions. Those two ill-timed and thoughtless decisions, especially the currency devaluation, made out of drunkenness and highness on drugs have finished Nigeria.

Nigeria is in real trouble. These guys Tinubu gathered together don't know what they are doing, they are clueless. Get out if you can.

3 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Blazetrailer: 9:06am On Mar 19
004gist:
sad

Always advising FG to raise tax, stop subsidies but they have never advised FG or block policians from bringing stolen funds to their banks in Europe and UK or stop them fromm buying properties in their countries

They will never condemn and reject shame elections. They will never condemned excessive borrowing.

siddon there, you will tell me whether their economy is the one going down the drain
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by yang(m): 9:11am On Mar 19
This people just pulled a forecast out of their ass and printed the rubbish


On a trade weighted basis the 1 USD should be trading at 7000 NGN in the next 18 months

Just to point at some erronous assumptions/conclusions from this report

You expect a tighter monetary policies

if the CBN tightens monetary policy more aggressively than we expect.”EIU stated in the report that following a sizable real-terms correction, naira’s outlook for 2025 was relatively stable, and might close at N1, 817 to the dollar in the review year.



You expect a rise in Debt to GDP and implicitly a huge rise in printed money supply (Fuel subsidy, Thiefinibiu and AKpabio budget padding, APC corruption, unproductive bloated civil servants and govt agency (minus health and education workers))

In addition, the report stated that an expected rise in formal borrowing would cause the public debt/GDP ratio to rise sharply in 2024-28. It predicted that a statutory 40 per cent ceiling would be breached by end of 2026, pushing public debt to GDP to 50.4 per cent by 2028, from less than 20 per cent in 2022.The report said, “We expect relatively large budget deficits as a consequence of Mr. Tinubu’s ‘fiscally active’ job creation and infrastructure spending agenda, as well as an implicit subsidy on petrol.“The 2024 budget includes a large increase in non-debt recurrent spending as high inflation necessitates higher public-sector salaries and cash transfers to poor households.”

but are modelling a drop in inflation to 11.7%

[b]The report forecasted inflation to average 30.3 per cent in 2024, from 24.7 per cent in 2023, reflecting the fact that petrol price increases in June 2023 will drop out of the year-on-year calculation from mid-2024, and prevent the rate from being even higher.It stated, “Assuming the naira stabilises, average inflation should fall to 20.7 per cent in 2025 and 11.7 per cent in 2028.“Inflation will, thus, remain well above the 6-9 per cent target range throughout the forecast period, owing to expected VAT rate increases, insecurity in agricultural regions (raising food prices), Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit, periodic monetisation of fiscal deficits, currency weakness, and a general inflation bias within economic policymaking. ”The report said following the recent hike in MPR by 400 basis points, to 22.75 per cent in February, and the cash reserve requirement by 1,200 basis points, “Another 100 basis points is likely to be added to the policy rate in 2024, assuming deficit monetisation continues and imported inflationary pressures remain strong.”It added, “The CBN has mentioned a switch to inflation targeting, but as this would rub up against government economic policy and given the CBN’s record of unorthodox policy, such a framework would have little credibility in anchoring inflation expectations.“The MPC attaches a large weight to economic growth, and policy will be subject to political interference.[/b]


How do you drop inflation when the goverment is printing money every year with a bloated budget to fund a criminal lifestyle through bpersistent devaluation. You do not account for the desinvestment occuring at the moment, where is the fiscal revenue going to come from

The report further predicted the country’s foreign exchange reserves to gradually rise over the forecast period, aided by a more market-driven exchange rate system and greater access to foreign borrowing.

How are the forex reserves going to rise with no investment? Either in the Oil and Gas or the manufacturing sector ? This report neither accounts for the FX forwards or the Oil and Gas forwards, these are the criminal contracts signed to steal future money from the Zoo Nigeria treasury

1 Like

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Blazetrailer: 9:12am On Mar 19
Dey play. You will be shocked that there are plans already by the FG to increase the VAT otherwise, the wont mention it. They git the intelligence. I have always trusted(+Bloomberg) them more because all they had predicted on the economy have come to pass. Lats week they mentioned that Nigeria will need more foreign loans to prop up the Naira, a lot of people smirfed at them, today there is news that Nigeria has almost finalised another $1BN from World bank.

I can assure you, VAT will be doubled by end of the year and Nigerians will do nothing about it, except cry on social media.


BigBashiru:
EIU report if you look closely is run by Europeans directly or by proxy. Unfortunately most blacks are brainwashed by media etc to worship Europeans. They just implemented European recommendations without question. They want to make it like western countries where ppl are taxed to death. 15% tax is too much.
Blacks sha. No sense at all.

2 Likes

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Blazetrailer: 9:13am On Mar 19
lol...brother, believe them when they say these things. You better start acting to save more money in forex.

yang:
This people just pulled a forecast out of their ass and printed the rubbish


On a trade weighted basis the 1 USD should be trading at 7000 NGN in the next 18 months

1 Like

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by BigBashiru: 9:16am On Mar 19
Blazetrailer:
Dey play. You will be shocked that there are plans already by the FG to increase the VAT otherwise, the wont mention it. They git the intelligence. I have always trusted(+Bloomberg) them more because all they had predicted on the economy have come to pass. Lats week they mentioned that Nigeria will need more foreign loans to prop up the Naira, a lot of people smirfed at them, today there is news that Nigeria has almost finalised another $1BN from World bank.



I can assure you, VAT will be doubled by end of the year and Nigerians will do nothing about it, except cry on social media.





They hv the intelligence fine that's not being disputed. But the fact is Nigerians worship Europeans and adopt their recommendations without question since they regard them as superior due to generations of colonialism brainwashed individuals.

1 Like

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by HellVictorinho6(m): 10:14am On Mar 19
BigBashiru:
EIU report if you look closely is run by Europeans directly or by proxy. Unfortunately most blacks are brainwashed by media etc to worship Europeans. They just implemented European recommendations without question. They want to make it like western countries where ppl are taxed to death. 15% tax is too much.
Blacks sha. No sense at all.

Werey

Where did all blacks agree?
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by HellVictorinho6(m): 10:16am On Mar 19
Blazetrailer:
Dey play. You will be shocked that there are plans already by the FG to increase the VAT otherwise, the wont mention it. They git the intelligence. I have always trusted(+Bloomberg) them more because all they had predicted on the economy have come to pass. Lats week they mentioned that Nigeria will need more foreign loans to prop up the Naira, a lot of people smirfed at them, today there is news that Nigeria has almost finalised another $1BN from World bank.

I can assure you, VAT will be doubled by end of the year and Nigerians will do nothing about it, except cry on social media.






Oponu


Did u give us arms 2 end the govment undecided
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by HellVictorinho6(m): 10:19am On Mar 19
Blazetrailer:
First off, I believe these predictions more than any rubbish that comes from CBN or Nigerian govt.

I said this sometime in one other posts, if Nigerians had an iota of idea of the shit the country is, the streets will be awash with protests to force this administration to act more prudently and thoughtfully on economic decisions. Those two ill-timed and thoughtless decisions, especially the currency devaluation, made out of drunkenness and highness on drugs have finished Nigeria.

Nigeria is in real trouble. These guys Tinubu gathered together don't know what they are doing, they are clueless. Get out if you can.


B@stard


U want people to expose themselves to bullets while u sip orijin
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Bullfallo(m): 10:21am On Mar 19
..oh it’s no longer the subsidy money and dollar subsidy. Its now tax? When you increase vax it end up worsening the inflation. Service and product will increase price in the same country where some states haven not implemented the 30k 15$ monthly minimum wages.

A growing country is a threat to western countries that why they want every country down. But the Chinese have the balls to stand on there own. Africans are just too weak and inferior to every other race

1 Like

Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by Dvdpity: 10:42am On Mar 19
The military should sack this government now before it totally destroyed this country.
Re: EIU Report: FG To Raise VAT To 15% By 2027 To Fund Fiscal Deficit by valentineuwakwe(m): 11:41am On Mar 19
Seems Nigeria is beeing controlled n told wat to do as a country...since the last report came out where the EU were saying our VAT is low, i just know they will pressurized Tinubu to jerk it up to even 20%.....that means prices of goods will still go up from next year..
God....is it bad to be a Nigerian?

1 Like

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