Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) has held a pre-29th Nigerian Economic Summit (#NES29) webinar with the theme “Efficiency to Prosperity: Mobilising Revenue and Resources”.
The CEO of Global Mandate Consulting Limited, Dr Suleyman Ndanusa in his welcome remarks, said that igniting economic transformation and establishing a country that guarantees prosperity rests heavily on the government’s financial strength.
He noted that Nigeria continues to experience fiscal strains in the face of growing spending outlays and responsibilities of the government and that over the past decade, the Nigerian government has faced persistently subdued revenue inflows and that despite considerable growth in non-oil revenue, the situation has become amplified by the sustained contraction in the Oil and Gas sector since the outbreak of COVID-19 in 2020.
Dr Ndanusa further stated that from the peak of N11.1 trillion flows into the federation account in 2011, the total federally collected revenue spiraled downwards to N5.6 trillion in 2016.
He said this was occasioned by the oil price slump in 2014, which led to a 69.7 percent decline in oil revenue by 2016. Despite several episodes of high crude prices afterwards, the government has not been able to push the oil revenue high enough to meet the 2011 level due to issues around production capacity and bulging subsidy payments, and Nigeria’s lack of transparency and accountability in governance and tax collection processes has engendered low commitment to tax payment.
Dr Femi Egbesola, the President of the Association of Small Business Owners, stated that there is a need for streamlined policies that encourage collaborations between government and stakeholders and that it is essential for the government to liaise with associations to get taxes from those at the bottom of the pyramid.
Egbesola further reiterated the need for the government to be more transparent about their finances and reduce their expenditures and remuneration of political office holders while reiterating the need for the country to continue diversifying the economy from oil to non-oil products.
Also, the President of the International Center for Tax Research and Development (ICTRD), Mrs Morenike Babington-Ashaye, said there should be an organisation committed to economic planning that the government can borrow ideas instead of bringing in foreigners with different ideas.
She noted that Nigeria is affected by foreign exchange rates, foreign reserves, balance of trade and government expenditure, even as she emphasised the need to minimise political influence on economic activities.
Babington-Ashaye said that tax collection shouldn’t be the government’s only priority, as when people understand how government works, people can voluntarily pay their taxes.
She further pointed out that the significant headwinds to revenue growth in Nigeria are the inefficiency in the revenue mobilisation framework due to leakage in the pipeline of revenue mobilisation.
“Too many government agencies are often involved in revenue collection from households and businesses, leading to multiplicity and duplication of taxes and levies. With such an arrangement, a substantial part of the revenue would have gone into administrative costs, and very little ends up with the government. Moreover, Nigeria operates mostly a regressive tax system with a shallow tax base, which does not often reflect the capacity to pay,” she stated.
Partner PwC Nigeria, Mr Kenneth Erikume, said that Nigeria is facing challenging times, particularly as it relates to revenue generation, and there is a need for the country to shore up its revenue profile.
He stated that there is an urgent need for strategic management of all the channels of government revenue sources to maximise and guarantee revenue growth over the long term.
“The government needs to adequately diversify revenue sources, taking full advantage of sources to grow government revenue. The government needs to harmonise taxes, broaden the tax base, convert informal and implicit taxes into formal government revenue, drive the transition of informal micro-enterprises into the formal economy, and adopt technology in revenue collection, among other issues that need to be addressed,” Erikume noted.
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