Daily Trust

Budget: FG to aggressive­ly pursue tax evaders

- By Francis Arinze Iloani

The 2018 budget submitted to the National Assembly on Wednesday by President Muhammadu Buhari, projects non-oil revenues of N4.17 trillion to fund part of the budget amounting to N8.61 trillion.

The forecasted non-oil revenue for 2018 is three times the value last year and revenues from tax collection­s are expected to rise following innovation­s being introduced by the government.

The federal government is using the carrot and stick approach to make companies and individual­s pay their taxes to fund the budget.

The government recently launched the Voluntary Assets and Income Declaratio­n Scheme (VAIDS) for individual­s and companies to regularise their tax status where necessary.

The scheme is expected to last for nine months only from 1st July 2017 to 31st March 2018 and is divided into two phases.

In the first phase, companies and persons that comply with VAIDS between July 1 and December 31 2017 will also pay the accumulate­d liability without interest and penalty while those who comply between July 1 and March 31, 2018 will pay only the liability and the interest without penalty.

However, companies and persons who fail to take advantage of the VAIDS period will pay the liabilitie­s, interest and still face the penalty.

Under Nigerian tax evasion is a laws, crime punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonme­nt of up to 5 years, while the taxpayer will still be required to pay the tax due along with the associated interest and penalties.

Typically, a penalty of 10 per cent of the tax due is assessed, along with related interest charges that accrue at 21 per cent per annum, started from the due date of the related tax charge while in some cases the penalty assessed is 100 per cent of the tax due.

The minister Kemi Adeosun of finance, said on Tuesday, “VAIDS ushers in an opportunit­y to increase the nation’s general tax awareness and compliance. It is a timelimite­d opportunit­y for taxpayers to regularise their tax status relating to previous tax periods.

Nigeria has high rate of tax evasion as shown in the Joint Tax Board (JTB) data and its tax to GDP ratio, at just 6 per cent, is one of the lowest in the world compared to India’s of 16 per cent, Ghana’s of 15.9 per cent, and South Africa’s of 27 per cent.

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