AUGUST 10, 2015
New rules to halt tax evasion, raise VAT underway BY OMOH GABRIEL CHAIRMAN, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) Mr. Sunday Ogungbesan weekend said the Federal Government is considering a review of Value Added Tax, VAT with a possible increase from 5 to 10 per cent. He said that FIRS is at the moment engaging stakeholders to sensitise the nation on the possibility of increase in VAT as the quick win for revenue generation for the country, saying that with
dwindling crude oil revenue the government expects to fill the gap with non-oil revenue. He said that the service is collaborating with the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN to capture the revenue flow of companies and individuals and that very soon it will be difficult for anybody resident in Nigeria to operate an account without a Tax Identification Number. Meanwhile, President Muhammadu Buhari has urged Nigerians to stop
paying mere lip service to agriculture, as crude oil and gas exports will no longer be sufficient as the country’s major revenue earner. The President gave the charge at an audience he granted Dr Kanayo Nwanze, the Nigerian born President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. “It’s time to go back to the land. We must face the reality that the petroleum we had depended on for so long will
AWARD: From left, Executive Director, Enterprise Risk Management, Heritage Bank, Jude Monye; British Deputy High Commissioner, Ray Kyles; MD/CEO, Heritage Bank, Ifie Sekibo; and Acting MD, Enterprise Bank, Mary Akpobome; at the presentation of ISO/INEC 27001:2013 certification award to Heritage Bank at the British Deputy High Commissioner’s Residence, Ikoyi, Lagos last Thursday. Photo: Kehinde Gbadamosi. C M Y K
no longer suffice. We campaigned heavily on agriculture, and we are ready to assist those who want to go into agricultural ventures” he said. Buhari pledged that his administration would also cut short the long bureaucratic processes that Nigerian farmers had to go through to get any form of assistance from government. He told the IFAD President that improvement of the productivity of farmers, dry season farming and creative ways to combat the shrinking of the Lake Chad will also receive the attention of his administration. “There is so much to be done. We will try and articulate a programme and consult organisations like IFAD for advice” he added. According to the President, foreign exchange will be conserved for machinery and other items needed for production “instead of using it to import things like toothpicks”. Nwanze had earlier congratulated Buhari on his victory at the general elections and assured him that IFAD was ready to give all possible assistance to the Federal Government and Nigerian farmers to boost agricultural production in the country. Nwanze, who later spoke to State House correspondents, said IFAD had since 1985 been providing loans and grants in the nation’s agricultural sector to boost agricultural production. “Nigeria has the largest portfolio of IFAD’s investment in Western and Central Africa and the second largest in Africa. But the case point here is that this country has all the endowments that it takes not only for it to produce enough food for its population but also to be the bread basket of region. And this is where my institution on my behalf, I offered our services and our support in the agenda of rural transformation as a key ingrate
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