Taxes & Tariffs | |
Taxes & Tariffs | |
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PROSHARE | |
PROSHARE |
Friday,
August 14, / 10:15 AM /
by FBNQuest Research / Header Image Credit: India
From
2011 through to 2014 FIRS comfortably met its targets for collection. It has
since fallen short because the administration elected in 2015 (and re-elected
last year) favours fiscal expansion and sets aggressive targets. For 2020 the
service initially aimed to collect N8.50trn, which would have been a 62%
increase on the outturn in 2019. Covid-19 has since intervened, so the
quarterly target appears to have been slashed from N2.13trn to N1.27trn. The
cut in the target for collection of petroleum profits tax (PPT) has been
brutal.
Total collection met just 56% of the far higher target in Q1 and, once
the bar had been lowered, marginally exceeded it in Q2. This outperformance was
due to the collection of N440bn from PPT vs a much reduced target of N71bn.
Relative to the target for Q2, non-oil tax receipts of N850bn
represented 71%. Other than stamp duty and contributions to a development fund
for higher education (NITDEF), the collection of all non-oil taxes and levies
fell short of target.
Relative to previous outturns, the story is mixed. Receipts from companies' income tax (CIT) in Q2 were well down on 2019 (and 2018). They peak between June and September, however, and it could well be that lockdown directly and indirectly delayed payments.
Tax collection by FIRS (N trn) |
|
Sources:
Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS); FBNQuest Capital Research |
Non-import VAT was flat y/y in Q2 at N246bn while NCS (Nigeria Customs
Service)-import VAT grew by 26% and stamp duty collection soared from N4bn to
N63bn.
The base of large taxpayers is small and our suspicion is that the
collection agencies, pressed by the FGN to raise funds for the fight against
the virus, will target them disproportionately.
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