The Guardian (Nigeria)

More worries for telecoms subscriber­s as FG plans 5% duty on recharge cards

- By Adeyemi Adepetun

WHILE Nigerians are yet to come to terms with the planned 40 per cent hike in telecoms services tariffs by telecoms operators, it appears more pains will be inflicted in the coming days, as report has it that the Federal Government has approved the collection of five per cent excise duty on telephone recharge cards and vouchers.

According to a report by Thecable, President Muhammadu Buhari, actually gave the directive.

In a letter by the Associatio­n of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria ( ALTON) to the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC), the service providers had claimed that the economic challenges, rising energy cost,

Russia/ Ukraine war, among others, necessitat­ed the need for them to hike cost of calls, SMS, and data.

Based on ALTON’S proposal, the price floor of calls will increase from N6.4 to N8.95 while the price cap of SMS will increase from N4 to N5.61.

But in Thecable report, the five per cent charge is part of new items on the list of goods liable for excise duty on the Finance Act in the country.

Excise duty is a levy charged at the time of manufactur­ing. It is also a form of indirect tax on the sale or consumptio­n of certain goods, products, services or activities such as tobacco, alcohol, narcotics, gambling etc., mainly to discourage their use and consumptio­n. Nigeria’s Finance Act has extended the list to include beverages, non- alcoholic drinks, among others.

According to the report, which made reference to a circular signed by the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, that directed the Nigerian Customs to create a tariff line for the collection of the excise on mobile telephones, electricit­y meters ( components) and set up boxes at five per cent.

The Federal Government is expected to raise at least N150 billion from the duty,

while customs will pocket about N10 billion, a seven per cent collection fee.

The circular conforms to another list of excisable items by customs to include telephone recharge cards and vouchers at five per cent.

It was also gathered that the collection was part of new items on the 2020 Finance Act signed by President Buhari. Although no rate was not stated, it is clear that the President might have okayed the collection of the duty at five per cent as empowered to do by the Act.

A telecoms expert, Kehinde Aluko, said fixing telecoms tariff is not impromptu, it takes processes. “Consultant­s will be contacted, the processes could take a year. The current tariff they are currently operating with went through that rigour. So, even if their demand will be considered, it will also take a process which is not going to encourage an instant implementa­tion.”

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