Leadership

OLUSHOLA BELLO

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Recently, the federal government said, it is proposing additional 20 per cent excise tax on nonalcohol­ic beverages in the country. This is outside the earlier introduced N10 per litre Ad-Valorem excise tax, which manufactur­ers are still struggling to cope with.

Although, the directive will generate further revenue for the government, market observers fear this might trigger collapse or near collapse of the soft drinks manufactur­ing subsector of the industrial sector. Moreover, Nigerian consumers will seek alternativ­es if the prices of soft drinks are increased as a result of this, translatin­g to low business volume for manufactur­ing operators.

This excludes the cost of write-offs of products produced, excised but not sold. With the introducti­on of the proposed additional 20 per cent Ad-Valorem tax, the collapse of soft drink market might only be a foregone conclusion.

This proposed tax, it was learnt, would affect companies like; the Nigerian Bottling Company, 7-Up, Rite Foods and Nestle Nigeria Plc.

The ugly situation has led to a decline in sales and revenue, as the manufactur­ers currently grapple with thriving; a developmen­t that will lead to workers layoff, possible plants shut down amidst other multiplier effects on the entire already staggering economy.

Findings from a recent research by Proshare, revealed that one of the largest carbonated drink makers saw revenues dip to such an extent that it had to call in consultant­s to give an overview of the company’s books to assess the impact of the tax regime on business sustainabi­lity. The outcome was unflatteri­ng, the reports asserted.

Proshare findings further posited that from the N10 per litre levy alone, the industry would lose revenue of N1.9 trillion in five years which may result in a 39.5 per cent decline in different government taxes such as Personal Income Tax(PIT), Corporate Income Tax(CIT) and Value Added Tax(VAT).

‘’Whereas tax is a normal way government­s fund their activities, but the proposed Ad-Valorem tax is not a silver bullet. The government will see a short-term rise in revenue, but company losses in subsequent years will wipe out all the gains. The Ad-Valorem tax proposal is zero-sum play,” experts said.

With over 190 million low-income citizens out of the official national population figure of 218 million, who are within the consumptio­n bracket of the’‘fizzy drinks,’ the demand for carbonated soft drinks among this target segment is phenomenal­ly huge either as ‘supplement­s’ to augment daily food or simply for memorable occasions. Hence, the different brands, within the CSD segment that provides ample variants to choose from, from the stable of the

At the manufactur­ing sectoral group’s meeting recently, the sectoral heads cried out over the harsh N10 per litre Ad-Valorem tax regime they are struggling with and wonder how they will cope with the proposed additional 20 per cent excise tax the federal government is planning to introduce.

This, they stated, portend doom for the sub-sector as the recent N10 per litre is still biting hard on their businesses, a situation that shows that an additional tax burden will ultimately lead to the total collapse of the industry.

According to Corporate Affairs and Sustainabi­lity director, Nigerian Bottling Company(NBC), Ekuma Eze, ‘’the proposed additional

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