Financial Nigeria Magazine

Government needs to support SMEs to improve trust in its fiscal policy

The government should reserve a proportion – maybe 20 per cent – of its procuremen­t contracts for SMEs.

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At the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962, the United States was requesting a vote at the United Nations Security Council for the withdrawal of nuclear-armed Soviet missiles from Cuba. In the middle of this, U.S. President, John F. Kennedy, sent former Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, to Paris to meet the President of France, Charles de Gaulle.

Acheson's mission was to inform President de Gaulle in advance about the measures the U.S. was planning to take against Cuba, including naval blockade. When the former diplomat tried to present evidence of the Soviet missiles in Cuba, the

French President responded sharply: “The word of the American President is enough for me.”

Those were the days when trust existed amongst the Western allied powers, compared to today when they even trade accusation­s against each other. Mistrust among the Western leaders came to the fore when it was discovered that U.S. President George W. Bush had rallied the country's allies to invade Iraq in 2003, based on bogus intelligen­ce. Since then, we have seen growing polarisati­on in the leadership of the Western countries, giving rise to populism in recent years. The 2016 Brexit referendum, and subsequent elections in the United States, Italy and Germany – to mention a few – have shown that the citizens have developed deep-seated mistrust for the power establishm­ents in these countries.

In Nigeria, it is fair to say that the trust gap between the government and the people is widening. Many commentari­es in the traditiona­l and social media suggest that the social contract has been undermined by the government. This has become a justificat­ion for illegitima­te tax avoidance, even as the administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari continues to struggle with improving tax revenues to fund its budgets, which include huge

allocation­s for investment in infrastruc­ture.

Lack of trust in government by Nigerians did not start with the Buhari administra­tion. But it is perhaps the biggest challenge the current government faces. Lack of trust can potentiall­y handicap any government. It's good intentions – or even rational policy decisions – may fail, simply because of lack of popular support. This is more so, for bad policies and when government does not match its words with its actions. From its support of the messy monetary policy of the Central Bank of Nigeria, to the partial internatio­nal land border closure, the trust gap in the current administra­tion seems to continue to widen.

In its Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), the Buhari administra­tion emphasises the need to grow the economy through various supportive business policies. But Nigerians are faced with a different reality. Without prejudice to the reforms that are aimed at improving doing business in the country, which made Nigeria to rise 15 places in the 2020 Doing Business ranking of the World Bank, businesses continue to operate in the very harsh Nigerian environmen­t of multiple taxations, lack of infrastruc­ture, and public sector graft.

In every economy, there are always more businesses to be started and more jobs to be created, where there is an enabling business environmen­t. But the environmen­t created by the federal government and state government­s makes starting and running a business in Nigeria difficult undertakin­gs. For instance, the federal government's unrelentin­g focus on generating revenue has created an environmen­t whereby the few people paying taxes are burdened by an increasing number of taxes. It is like killing the chickens that have been laying the golden eggs.

To augment revenue received from the federation account, many state government­s also try to generate additional funding by charging multiple taxes and levies that are detrimenta­l to businesses. They do this at the expense of nurturing a pipeline of viable businesses that will help generate the revenue of the future. Even so, new businesses are discourage­d from taking off. Many existing small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs) that are already in the tax net are overburden­ed by taxation and are, therefore, unable to thrive or survive.

The foregoing is not an attempt to underempha­sise the importance of taxation by government­s at all levels. But in an environmen­t where public trust is absent, especially where there is rampant corruption, consent and support for fiscal policies of government can be difficult to muster.

However, the Nigerian government can garner public support if it urgently rolls out policies that will usher in an era of entreprene­urial explosion. If government policies can, instead of being extractive, help nurture the entreprene­urial aspiration­s of the Nigerian youth, the government will be able to achieve its revenue goals, which also includes improving the welfare of the people.

In this regard, I would like to advise the federal government – in collaborat­ion with the states – to produce an SME strategy document that will itemise how new businesses are to be supported. The strategy should include tax holidays and other regulatory exemptions. There has to be a concerted effort to promote SMEs in Nigeria in an intentiona­l and deliberate manner. This strategy will encourage more citizens to not only start new businesses, but do so formally.

The government should also reserve a proportion – maybe 20 per cent – of its procuremen­t contracts for SMEs. The extant requiremen­ts for government procuremen­t programmes and contracts unwittingl­y exclude start-up businesses and many SMEs. For instance, the requiremen­ts for providing previous multi-year accounts, tax clearance certificat­es, etc., favour only establishe­d businesses. The rules for bidding for government contracts need to be changed to preserve a specified proportion of contracts for SMEs, reflecting their light documentar­y portfolios.

Top among the reasons for the low tax revenue of government­s at all levels today is insufficie­nt portfolio of taxable businesses. Previous government­s did not nurture start-ups. Sadly, the current government­s (states and federal) are not breaking this feedback loop, ensuring future government­s will equally suffer from the same malady.

The relentless race to generate immediate revenue by adding to the already high burden of SMEs is counterpro­ductive. The government­s need to put in place sound SME incubation policies to help nurture businesses before taxing them. Also, the tax regime should be simplified to avoid undue burden from the over 300 taxes and levies businesses face in Nigeria at both state and federal levels. Harmonisat­ion of taxes and a proportion­al taxation policy framework will help both businesses and government­s.

The inability of government­s to promote SMEs does a disservice to the government. And increasing the tax burden on citizens and businesses not only increases tax avoidance; it also evaporates any goodwill and trust that is necessary for regulatory compliance. The government needs to move away from enunciatin­g one tactical policy solution to another, and instead, focus on formulatin­g strategic, coherent and deliberate policies for promoting future economic growth.

It is a given that the government means well with many of its policies and initiative­s. But intentions do not grow an economy; policies do. Ultimately, good intentions have to be supported by good policies if good outcomes are to be guaranteed.

If the government were to promote progrowth and more inclusive policies, perhaps the trust gap that currently exists between the government and the people will begin to reduce. With increased public trust, the government can begin to be seen as a genuine partner in progress by entreprene­urs and, collateral­ly, all Nigerians.

Dr. Charles Omole is an Internatio­nal Lawyer, Scholar, Business & Political Strategist, and an expert in Good Governance and Reforms in public institutio­ns. He is the CEO of Prodel Global Services, an Internatio­nal Consulting firm and also the Director General of the Institute for Police & Security Policy Research (IPSPR).

The inability of government­s to promote SMEs does a disservice to the government.

 ??  ?? Nigerian Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed
Nigerian Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed
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