• Wednesday, April 24, 2024
businessday logo

BusinessDay

World Bank, FG stress need for higher tax revenue

FCT-IRS goes tough,  issues deadline for filing of annual returns

The World Bank and the Federal Government of Nigeria have highlighted the need for the country to increase its tax revenue and phase out petrol subsidy.

The fiscal challenges facing the country were highlighted at a panel session during the ongoing Nigerian Economic Summit organised by the Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG) in Abuja on Monday.

Shubham Chaudhuri, country director for Nigeria at the World Bank, said there should be a model for mutual accountability, whereby the federal government encourages the state government in its growth drive.

“Similar to matching grand schemes in some other federation where the federal government as an executive has an interest in encouraging subnationals to take certain actions or policies in areas that provides the subnational with an incentive, either in terms of fiscal management or being able to generate increased IGR which can be supported with some form of financing upfront,” he said.

The World Bank director said after that, the next real step is to think about how to sustain Nigeria’s own fiscal federal setup.

“Nigeria needs to spend more on the right things and spend better but to do this, it needs to raise more revenue; if you phase out fuel subsidies, the government gets more money to do other things,” he said.

He also spoke about taxes, saying people are willing to pay more if the government spends better, especially on provision of basic services.
Read also: Nigeria’s N2.2tn annual healthcare need hangs on proposed allocation increments

He said there are some basic taxes that every other country in sub-Saharan Africa has that Nigeria does not, which needs to be reviewed.

Zainab Ahmed, minister of finance, budget and national planning, said the fuel subsidy is a fiscal drain affecting the country significantly, especially as the government struggles with revenue problems and a high debt profile.

She said the funds channelled to fuel subsidy can be used for other things aimed at economic improvement instead of increasing the country’s debt profile

“Personally I wish we can introduce the federal personal income tax which will be a topper on the existing income tax collected by the state; I also wish our VAT was at 10 percent and not 7.5 percent,” she said.

Ahmed said Nigeria’s citizens have low tax morale because there is not enough returns on it to the citizens which has discouraged further remittance.

“The citizens are not paying taxes; we have to communicate to them more and show taxpayers what their money is being used for, also we have to make tax compliance easy for easy remittance,” she said.

While speaking earlier at the opening ceremony, the finance minister said although challenged by a shortfall in revenues, the government has remained committed to driving growth and prioritising infrastructural development.

Speaking on the implementation of the National Development Plan 2021-2025, she said the government has made transformational investments in infrastructure to restore the national railways and road network.

She added that for this plan, financing from the government will rely heavily on domestic resource mobilization from non-oil revenue sources through the results of the implementation of the Strategic Revenue Growth Initiative and the Annual Finance Acts.

She said the government remains focused on unlocking the economic potential of the non-oil and high employment-generating sectors to achieve sustainable and inclusive growth and development.

She also revealed that the Nigeria agenda 2050 which seeks to increase the country’s per capita GDP to $33,000 by 2050 and has a moral imperative to lower the poverty and unemployment rate significantly to ensure sustainable broad-based growth will be launched soon.

Clem Agba, minister of state, budget and national planning, said the NDP 2021-2025 has a unique objective of establishing a strong foundation for a concentric economic diversification.

“The plan is designed to lift 35 million people out of poverty and generate 21 million full time jobs by 2025, thus setting the stage for achieving the government’s target of lifting 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in 10 years,” he said.

He added that the plan is underpinned by a very strong macroeconomic framework projecting an annual average real GDP growth of 5 percent adding that improvement in revenue is expected to result in total revenue projected at 15 percent of GDP by 2025.

“The growth is envisaged to come from Agriculture, Trade, Services, Construction and Manufacturing, Communication sectors,” he said.

Agba also said that the plan has an investment size of N348.1 trillion, 86 percent of which is expected to come from the private sector while the other 14 percent will be from the public sector, all of which will be allocated to Sectors, Programmes and Projects.

For the Nigeria Agenda 2050, he said this was formulated to address several subsisting development challenges in the country within the framework of six 5-Year Medium- Term Development Plan has programmes and Projects in the Plans are expected to vigorously spur development and poverty reduction.

Taiwo Oyedele, Fiscal Policy Partner and Africa Tax Leader at PwC, recommended that to drive a sustainable fiscal system,government at all levels should publish revenue collection data annually with necessary and accurate data adding that political leaders and MDAs should be fully compliant with the law and demonstrate this to the public

“For revenue growth, the government should harmonise multiple taxes and collection agencies and for spending it should implement zero-based budgeting, address subsidies, leverage equity finance, re-prioritise spending, re-assess tax expenditures,” he said.