Nigeria is to carry out
about 28 major reviews and amendment to the current tax laws and
regulations to ensure a smooth take off of the National Tax Policy.
Details of the review are contained in
the National Tax Policy document, which was approved by the Federal
Executive Council last month.
An analysis of the document by our
correspondent shows that 11 items are listed for review under
“Appendix
A” of the document; while 17 major amendments are expected to be carried
out under
“Appendix B” of the tax policy.
Those items listed for review under
“Appendix A” are tax deductions based on the National Office for
Technology Acquisition and Promotion; transfer pricing regulations; and
pre-incorporation expenses.
Both transactions are currently being regulated under Section 27 of the Companies Income Tax Act.
Others are interest and penalties for
tax default; capital allowance on some certain items; artificial
transactions; ministerial and Federal Inland Revenue Service approval
for tax deductions; clarity on withholding tax regulation; pioneer
legislation; infra-group transaction; Stamp Duty Act and Franked
Investment Income.
In justifying some of the items listed
under “Appendix A” for amendment such as transfer pricing, the document
said the review would align the issuance of foreign exchange, tax
deduction with technology transfer.
It said, “As transfer pricing is tax
legislation, the TP documentation should supersede NOTAP approval for
the purposes of tax deduction.
“This policy should be harmonised
between the ministries of Information and Technology, the Central Bank
of Nigeria, and the Ministry of Finance.
“Aligning NOTAP with TP regulations to
ensure NOTAP agreed to payments is always consistent with the TP basis
for deduction to ensure NOTAP is more commercial in application.”
For incorporation tax, the document said
the amendment would assist to provide clarity and allow a deduction for
legitimate business expenditure.
It added, “There is no rule that
specifically deals with such expenses. There should be a specific
provision to allow a deduction for such expenses either via capital
allowances or a revenue deduction.”
Under Appendix B, the document listed
some of the areas for review as commencement, change of accounting and
cessation rules; Excess Dividend Tax; minimum tax; taxation of insurance
companies; Value Added Tax; intra-group transactions and stamp duty.
Others are Capital Gains Tax;
withholding tax on dividend declared by companies engaged in gas
utilisation projects; restriction of capital allowance claim; holding
companies; and Real Estate Investment Trusts.
The document showed that despite the
potential of taxation as a dynamic tool for sustainable national
development, the Nigerian economy over the years had not derived the
maximum benefits of its tax system in terms of revenue generation.
It added that the nation’s tax system
had been plagued by numerous challenges such as lack of robust framework
for the taxation of the informal sector and high network individuals,
thus limiting the revenue base and creating inequity; fragmented
database of taxpayers and weak structure for exchange of information by
tax authorities, resulting in revenue leakage.
It listed other challenges facing the
tax system as inordinate drive by all tiers of government to grow
Internally Generated Revenue, which had led to the arbitrary exercise of
regulatory powers for revenue purpose; and lack of clarity on taxation
powers of each level of government and encroachment on the powers of one
level of government by another.
In the same vein, it noted that the
country’s tax system was affected by poor accountability of tax revenue;
insufficient capacity, which had led to the delegation of powers of
revenue officials to third parties, thereby creating complications in
the tax system; and the use of aggressive and unorthodox methods for tax
collection.
0 comments:
Post a Comment