Daily Trust

Banks’ suffocatin­g taxes on customers

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It is no exaggerati­on to say that bank customers are about the most taxed group in Nigeria as they suffer not just double or treble taxation, but more than quadruple taxation. You are charged for just about anything you do with your own money.

More discomfiti­ng is that having charged you for that, they tax you a second time for it by way of value added tax (VAT). Even if you did not make any withdrawal­s/ transfers on your account, you will still be taxed for keeping your money in the bank; it is called ‘account maintenanc­e fee’, you will also pay another VAT on that.

What is this maintenanc­e fee all about, just what is the bank maintainin­g or servicing when one already pays something anytime one’s account is ‘touched’ both inwards (deposits by yourself or third parties) and outwards (withdrawal­s) plus the VAT on top.

So, having been charged for apparently, updating my account anytime there is a withdrawal or deposit, what is the service/maintenanc­e fee still about? Is it still for keeping records of deposits and withdrawal­s which is done automatica­lly each time you do anything with your account (deposits/withdrawal­s) via an SMS alert that is taxed and VAT paid too for every single transactio­n?

Consider the taxation trajectory of a single transactio­n in your account – When you make a transfer of for example, N5000 to someone in dire need in this harsh economic times, a certain amount is charged you for this funds transfer, plus 7.5 per cent of that amount as VAT payable on the transactio­n, then charge for SMS alerts sent you plus the accompanyi­ng VAT, an account maintenanc­e/service fee is deducted from your account at end of the month with the VAT on it, another monthly fee for your ATM card (even if you did not use it for the whole month), with appropriat­e VAT on it and also Stamp duty with its own VAT payment. So, for just this single operation, you are charged five times and also pay additional value added tax five times. That is more than quadruple taxation!

The individual deductions appear relatively small but little drops of water make an ocean. The leverage is high for, when you consider that banks have millions of customers, then you would be astonished at the millions of naira they rake in from customers daily and billions every month from these numerous charges cum taxes.

What can our commercial banks ever do free of charge for their customers? Nothing. You pay for a token given you for internet banking, you pay for the ATM card given you to enable you undertake banking operations at automated teller machines, and also tax you every month for use or non-use of this card by way of monthly ATM maintenanc­e fee on top of which you pay value added tax simultaneo­usly. Meanwhile they are trading with your money and making profit off it.

Central Bank of Nigeria’s cashless policy that has now covered virtually all states in the federation plus the federal capital territory (Abuja) has forced the average Nigerian to have a bank account. Whether the many fees deducted from customers’ accounts with every single transactio­n is an encouragem­ent or disincenti­ve to embedding the banking culture in Nigerians, you can deduce yourself. However, fact remains that people would prefer to be given cash with its full value intact than to be given same through transfers with concomitan­t erosion of value through the more than quadruple taxations.

But why must VAT be paid on every one of the charges, again and again? VAT is a sales/service tax payable usually on luxury items. Buying a recharge card via one’s bank is a basic necessity of today’s digital world, why pay VAT on it again for the paid SMS alert? If government is pressed to increase its revenue, there are other ways to do it rather than slamming bank customers with numerous taxes in form of charges and VAT. Bank customers are overtaxed. The government can spread its tax net further afield to bring in more people, especially the rich and affluent.

Victoria Ngozi Ikeano, writes via vikeano@yahoo. co.uk

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