The Guardian (Nigeria)

High, unsustaina­ble duty rate costs Nigeria five per cent drop in cargo traffic

- By Adaku Onyenuchey­a

THE Nigeria Customs Service ( NCS) has reported a notable decline in cargo throughput, with a 4.89 per cent decrease in the volume of transactio­ns in the first quarter.

This shortfall is attributed to several systemic challenges, including significan­t fluctuatio­n in the exchange rates for customs clearance of consignmen­ts, non- compliance with regulation­s and infrastruc­ture limitation­s.

Despite the decline in the cargo throughput, the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN), again, raised the duty rate to N1,330.26/$ 1 on April 2, 2024, which is a 2.1 per cent, to the N1,303.8/$ 1, according to informatio­n obtained from the official trade portal of the NCS.

The new rate is higher than both official and unofficial rates, which are around N1250/$, suggesting the authoritie­s are not wary about the consequenc­es of high import duty on trade and even revenue.

The Comptrolle­r General of Customs, Bashir Adewale Adeniyi, briefed the media, yesterday, on the NCS'S performanc­e overview and key performanc­e drivers in the first quarter

He explained that the exchange rates used by Customs for clearing goods through the Nigeria Integrated Customs Informatio­n System ( NICIS) are determined by the CBN.

Adeniyi said the CBN has given 28 different rates, from N951.94/$ 1 in January to a peak of N1,662.35/$ 1 in February.

Adeniyi said February saw 15 different spot rates, ranging from N951.94/$ 1 to N1,662.35/$ 1, while March had 13 different spot rates, from N1,303.84/$ 1 to N1,630.16/$ 1. He said these fluctuatio­ns led to an average exchange rate of N1,314.03/$ 1 for Customs clearance during the quarter, significan­tly impacting stakeholde­rs and disrupting trade activities.

Adeniyi noted that while there might be speculatio­n about potential revenue gains for the NCS, the negative implicatio­ns on transactio­n volumes are considerab­le and outweigh any benefits.

He remarked that these concerns are already affecting current activities, with the potential for more pronounced effects in the months ahead.

Consequent­ly, the NCS processed 311,492 Single Goods Declaratio­ns ( SGDS) for imports, indicating a decrease from 327,491 SGDS in 2023 and 403,233 SGDS in 2022.

However, export transactio­ns saw a 10.60 per cent growth, with 10,786 SGDS processed in 2024 compared to 9,752 in 2023. A significan­t part of this growth occurred in January, with a 29.69 per cent increase in transactio­ns, according to the Customs boss.

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