THISDAY

TIME TO REVIEW TAX WAIVERS

Indiscrimi­nate tax incentives are unhelpful to the economy

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Recent revelation by the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Comptrolle­rGeneral (CG), Adewale Adeniyi, that the government lost N1.8 trillion to waivers granted between January and November last year should compel a rethink of our national economic priorities. Just recently, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) admonished Nigeria and other sub-Saharan African countries to focus on eliminatin­g tax exemptions and mobilise domestic revenue to reduce their fiscal deficits. The advice could not have come at a better time. With mounting debts at a time most of the economic indices do not look good, it cannot be business as usual in Nigeria. “Mobilising domestic revenue is less detrimenta­l to growth in countries where initial tax levels are low, whereas the cost associated with reducing expenditur­es is particular­ly high given Africa’s large developmen­t needs,” said the IMF.

Ordinarily, as we have argued several times on this page, there is nothing wrong with waiver which is one of the instrument­s used by government­s all over the world to achieve specific set goals and objectives in line with their economic aspiration­s. However, the way and manner it is granted in Nigeria has over the years raised fundamenta­l questions about transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. In fact, the use of waiver has been bastardise­d to the extent that successive administra­tions in the country have turned it into an avenue for graft as top government officials connive with some unscrupulo­us elements in the private sector to corner billions of naira into their pockets and that of cronies.

Although tax waivers are revenues not coming to government, they are sometimes necessary to provide incentives for businesses to expand, to generate jobs and grow the economy. But many studies also reveal that most of the waivers granted in Nigeria over the years amount to leaving money on the table and they incentivis­e collusion between government officials and their cronies. Therefore, a review of the effectiven­ess of existing waivers (not just pioneer status) is necessary for any government that is interested in improving the welfare of the people.

Today, no one can give a specific figure on the exact amount Nigeria has lost to the indiscrimi­nate granting of waiver, because the practice is as rampant as it is uncoordina­ted since it is done at the instance of the president and ministers. In 2011, the House of Representa­tives revealed that not less than 183 undertakin­gs and individual­s were at the period beneficiar­ies of tax waivers, exemptions and concession­s running into several billions of naira that should ordinarily accrue to the federation account. The list is today far longer. There is therefore no better time than now to plug all the loopholes of the abuse the granting of waiver has been subjected to over the years. The federal government should get serious and stop paying lip service to growing the local economy.

Some incentives may be necessary and useful, so we urge the federal government to conduct a comprehens­ive review and run its model in a bid to eliminate many that amount to giving official seal to graft. For example, tax credit for infrastruc­ture is a good initiative and we have seen some roads from the policy. But there have also been reports over several years that the pioneer policy is being abused. Many who do not pioneer anything can access it just by adding another line to existing factories. This is why the federal government should take the IMF admonition very seriously. The regime of indiscrimi­nate waivers, incentives and exemptions is killing local initiative­s and fuelling corruption in Nigeria. The federal government must put an end to it.

The regime of indiscrimi­nate waivers, incentives and exemptions is killing local initiative­s and fuelling corruption in Nigeria

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