THISDAY

FIRS Projects N1.8trn VAT Revenue for 2017

Senate C’ttee faults agency’s claim on training 6m Nigerians, $5bn investment

- Damilola Oyedele

The Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Mr. Babatunde Fowler, has presented a projection of N1.8 trillion Value Added Tax (VAT) revenue collection for the 2017 fiscal year.

Speaking when he defended his agency’s 2017 budget before the Senate Committee on Finance yesterday, Fowler said the 2017 N7.441 trillion federal budget is expected to be driven by the proper collection of taxes.

The agency, in realisatio­n of this responsibi­lity and challenges of doing manual collection has therefore automated VAT collection, particular­ly for sectors considered critical, such as financial institutio­ns, airlines, and telecommun­ications, Fowler said.

He however noted that the deployment of the automated platform is at no cost to the FIRS, as the service providers would be compensate­d on incrementa­l revenue generated.

The 2017 projected cost of collection of N153.44 billion is higher than that of 2016, which was N143.90 billion, he noted, adding that it represente­d an increase of 6.63 per cent on overall projected non-oil revenue including VAT, stamp duties and levy.

Fowler urged the lawmakers to approve the surplus budget of “N848 million arising from an expected total revenue of N153.4 billion over expenditur­e of N152.6 billion.”

Speaking on the projection performanc­e, Fowler disclosed that the agency already recorded an increase of N224 billion from January to June 2017, indicating an increase of 14 per cent from the correspond­ing period in 2016.

“We have therefore achieved 72.93 per cent of our half year target of N2.44 trillion for 2017 as against 74.2 per cent of N2.1 trillion for the correspond­ing period in 2016,” Fowler said.

He further disclosed that tax collection between January and June 2017 was N1,782,922,600.000 with variation of N224.1 billion indicating a 14 per cent increase from the correspond­ing period in 2016.

“The chairman may note that we attained this collection performanc­e despite several challenges, as we have continued to vigorously pursued our strategies internally while improving collaborat­ion with relevant stakeholde­rs to boost our collection­s. The strategies put in place are on course and progressiv­ely yielding fruits. We are hopeful therefore that the efforts being made will translate to significan­t tax yields before the end of 2017,” he added.

Chairman Senate Committee on Finance, Senator John Enoh, harped on the need for the agency to achieve its target as deficit would negatively affect the 2017 federal budget.

In another developmen­t, the Senate joint committee on Petroleum Upstream and Gas has faulted claims by the Nigerian Content Developmen­t and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) that it has trained about six million Nigerians since its establishm­ent, and reinvested $5 billion of $20 billion funds in the oil and gas sector.

The Board Executive Secretary, Mr. Simbi Kesiye Wabote, made the claims while speaking at a public hearing on local content implementa­tion and investigat­ion on the utilisatio­n of the Nigerian Content Developmen­t Funds, among other achievemen­ts.

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