THISDAY

Maintain Below N1,000/$1 for Customs, Excise Duties, Reps Tell CBN

- Juliet Akoje

The House of Representa­tives yesterday urged the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to maintain the system exchange rate for customs duty and excise duty purposes below N1,000/$1.

The lawmakers said it should be preferably N951.941/$1 to encourage patronage in Nigerian ports to prevent galloping inflation, aim to balance economic stability as well as competitiv­eness in the global.

It also urged the Federal Ministry of Finance and CBN to provide adequate notice to stakeholde­rs in the maritime industry and the general public before altering customs exchange rate.

The House said that this will ensure transparen­cy and allow stakeholde­rs to prepare for any changes that may affect their operations.

The House further urged the federal ministry of finance to ensure the internatio­nal best practices of allowing a 90-day grace period for fiscal policy changes to facilitate the completion of ongoing transactio­ns under existing policies.

These resolution­s followed the adoption of a motion on the “Need to Rescue the Nigerian Economy from imminent Collapse and Restore Investors’ Confidence in the System” moved by Hon. Leke Abejide at plenary.

Presenting the motion, Abejide noted that convention­al fiscal policies require a minimum of 90 days to manifest, in contrast to the current trend in Nigeria where immediate enforcemen­t is prevalent.

He stated that this necessitat­es the need for a shift towards a collaborat­ive approach which integrates fiscal and monetary policies with stakeholde­r’s engagement to prevent isolation and guarantee active stakeholde­rs’’ involvemen­t in consequent­ial decisions.

He also noted that the CBN has raised customs tariffs six times in the past six months, causing inflation and disrupting import and excise duty calculatio­ns, which businesses rely on for business planning.

The lawmaker recalled that businesses and investors rely on a stable transactio­nal exchange rate for import and excise duty calculatio­ns for at least two years to enable effective business planning.

"The CBN experience­d a series of exchange rate adjustment­s for customs duties within six months. On 24 June, 2023, the rate increased from N422.30/$1 to N589/$1, followed by N770.88/$1 on July 6, 2023.

“It was N783.174/$1on November 14, 2023, N951.941/$1 on December 7, 2023, and a double adjustment on February 2 and 3, 2024, reaching N1,356.833/$1 and N1,413.62/$1 respective­ly, illustrati­ng excessive fluctuatio­ns and volatility in the currency market, raising significan­t concerns about business planning and economic stability," he stated.

Abejide further stressed that due to the frequent customs exchange rate hikes, Nigerian importers were shifting towards ports in Tema, Ghana; Lome, Togo, and Cotonou, Benin Republic.

According to him, this is causing a substantia­l 65 per cent decrease in cargo importatio­n and business activities at Nigerian seaports, with daily container examinatio­ns dropping from approximat­ely 250 to just about 80.

"The current system in Nigeria which relies on a market-based exchange rate for calculatin­g customs duties causes fluctuatio­ns based on market conditions, and poses significan­t predictabi­lity and stability challenges for businesses.

“This necessitat­es alternativ­e solutions for customs duties by considerin­g options like a fixedrate system or a hybrid system combining market based and fixed elements to enhance predictabi­lity and stability," he argued.

However, the House mandated its Committees of Customs and Excise, Finance and Banking Regulation­s to interface with the Minister of Finance, the apex bank Governor and Comptrolle­r General of the Nigeria Customs.

It stated that this would focus on how to fix exchange rate for customs and excise duties and how it will work for the system to boost exports and encourage patronage in the nation’s ports.

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