The Chairman, Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee, Taiwo Oyedele, on Monday explained that the objective of the tax reform bills currently before the National Assembly is to fix Nigeria’s economy for shared prosperity and not to generate more money as being speculated.
Oyedele made the clarification when he was featured as one of the panellists on Channels Television’s Townhall on Tax Reforms.
In the past few weeks, the bills have pitched some state governors against the Federal Government, with the governors calling for the withdrawal of the bills to create room for more consultation.
On Sunday, Borno State Governor, Prof Babagana Zulum, also called on his colleagues and Northern stakeholders to reject the bills, insisting that they would damage the region’s economy if implemented.But Oyedele said there are many misconceptions being peddled about the bills when it was obvious many of the critics had not taken their time to properly vet them.
He said, “Our economy is underperforming. We are not growing enough, poverty is widespread and we do not have inclusive and sustainable growth, and there can’t be shared prosperity unless we address those issues. While we face a myriad of issues, the fiscal system, including taxation clearly, is one major area.If I want to summarise it, I would say that the fiscal and tax system is like the knee on the neck of our economic prosperity as a people. It is important to state that the primary objective of the reforms is not to generate more revenue. I see people get that wrong every time. It is to fix the economy in a way that there can be shared prosperity.
If your businesses are growing, expanding within and outside the shores of this country, if our individuals are earning income and thriving, then taxes will be a natural consequence of their prosperity. That is really the fundamental objective of the reforms. So, we know that the work we’re asked to do for our country is such an enormous amount of work, but critical.”
Continuing, Oyedele also explained why many felt the Presidency was in cahoots with the National Assembly on the bill.
According to him, they planned to get the reform bills sorted out within a year as Nigeria does not have to wait for four to five years to get it done, saying, “If we’re going to take all our time, we would have asked for about four or five years. We knew Nigeria had no luxury of time. We decided we should put in all our efforts to get this done within one year. We have tax laws that are very old and no longer fit for mobiles, including those we inherited from our colonial masters.
“So, we said we’ll use the opportunity of this reform to rewrite those laws so that the laws made by Nigerians for Nigeria to be able to drive our prosperity going forward. And that’s what led to the four bills that we have before the National Assembly today that have been properly summarised.
“So, for households and individuals, including our young population, these bills are looking to exempt low-income earners completely from tax, those who earn about N83,000 per month or N1 million a year.”.