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Friday, June 26, 2020 09:35
AM / by KPMG Nigeria/ Header Image Credit:
The Federal Inland Revenue
Service (FIRS) on Wednesday, 24 June 2020 issued a Public Notice to clarify enquiries
received from taxpayers on the tax exempt status of some items included in
Paragraph 2 of the recently published Value Added Tax (Modification Order),
2020 ("the Order"). The Order was signed
by the Honourable Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning (HMoF),
Mrs. Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, pursuant to her powers under Section 38 of the
Value Added Tax Act (VAT), Cap. V1, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 (as
amended).
The FIRS asserts in the Public Notice that the:
(a) main objective of the
Order was to clarify the definition of the items exempted in the First Schedule
to the VAT Act through extension of the list.
(b) inclusion of the
Common External Tariff codes of the exempt items in Paragraph 2 of the Order
was to guide importers, Nigerian Customs Service and other relevant
stakeholders on items that would not be subject to VAT at the ports.
(c) following items
(hereafter referred to as "alleged non-exempt items"), though included in
Paragraph 2 of the Order, remain liable to VAT at 7.5% until they are exempted
by an appropriate statutory instrument:
Comments
The issuance of the Order and the amendment of the
First Schedule to the VAT Act are within the statutory powers of the HMoF under
the VAT Act. Therefore, the provisions
of the Order are binding on all stakeholders in the tax system, including the
FIRS.
The issuance of the Public Notice by the FIRS,
which contradicts the express provisions of the Order, raises the question
whether a Public Notice issued by the FIRS can override a subsidiary
legislation promulgated by the HMoF pursuant to her power under VAT Act to
amend, vary or modify the list set out in the First Schedule of the Act.
It is pertinent to refer to the judgement of the
Federal High Court (FHC) in the case of Warm Spring & Ors. vs FIRS
(FHC/L/CS/157/2015), where the court upheld that "...neither the FIRS nor its
Chairman is legally empowered to make an order to either amend, vary or modify
the list of VAT exempt items...". Thus,
where the FIRS is of the view that the alleged non-exempt items were
erroneously included in Paragraph 2 of the Order, the error cannot be validly
corrected through a public notice. A public notice is an administrative
document and cannot override the Order duly issued by the HMoF and published
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