Despite claims of surpassing revenue target by the Customs
Service, Nigeria is said to have lost a whopping N90 billion ($550million) in
revenue from tax evasion to the grey market operators in the automobile
industry over the last four years, the Managing Director, Financial Derivatives
Company Limited (FDC), Mr Bismark Rewane has said.
Describing the loss as mind boggling, Rewane, a renowned financial
analyst, in a report released at the weekend by his Company , said the
loss was equivalent to 4.5 per cent of the total exports of Kenya or four per
cent of the total exports of Ghana. “This amount could fund the construction of
one petroleum refinery or a modern power station with 1000 Mega Watts capacity.
He explained the grey market as situation in which goods are
imported inappropriately into a market without the manufacturer’s consent,
thereby short-changing the authorized dealers.
The authorities of the Nigeria Customs Service had said it has
surpassed the projected revenue over the same period due to some stringent
measures put in place to check leakages of revenue.
The Comptroller-General, Abdulahi Inde Dikko had attributed the
feat to the stringent measures he put in place to closely-monitor revenue
performance and block leakages. These measures he said include the creation of
a System-Audit Unit in Headquarters to monitor duty payment in all Ports, the
automation of the entire Customs Clearance Procedure which allows for faster
and smoother clearance and the improved quality of Customs Workforce that is
better-trained and motivated.
However, Rewane said the revenue loss was too staggering when
viewed on a leveraged basis of one is to three (1:3), saying it can finance the
rehabilitation of two seaports and two modern airports, with an income per
capita of $1500 and infrastructure gap of $200 billion,
The FDC Chief Executive Officer rued over the monumental loss of
government revenue arising from the grey market which he said affects
government revenue from both direct and indirect taxes. According to him, while
direct tax loss comes from the reduced sales and profit in the legitimate
automobile industry, indirect tax loss comes from the custom duties and
excises.
“The bulk of the loss comes from the indirect taxes based on FDC’s
survey. Recent data from the CBN shows that a fall in customs and excise duties
was one of the reasons the Federal Government non-oil receipts declined by
30.3% to N589.98bn in the last quarter of 2012.
“From our investigations, the continuous decline in government
customs receipts can be due to either. A reduction in national import, or to
increased importation through the grey market leading to avoidance of duty
payment by grey market
operators and corruption at the ports.
“Data collected from the Nigeria Port Authority (NPA),
Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) and through independent survey of
the automobile industry shows that grey import is striving and almost at par
with official import volumes. Loss to government from grey import is N85.2bn
between 2008 and 2011.”
Rewane said in some cases, automobiles that are destined for
land-locked nations such as Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad and trans-shipped through
the ports find their way to the Nigerian market and custom duty payment is
avoided in the process.
He said the FDC Lagos urban inflation rose by 1.39 per cent to
12.77 per cent in February from 11.38 per cent in January.
He said the increase was mainly attributable to a rise in the
prices of a few items with higher weights in the index.
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Politics
Grey, reduction in import and corruption. Who are the beneficiaries? I am positive they are not even Sure of the missing finacial figure which could be in trillions. Our leaders react only when realize a mega deal has been perpetuated without them. The custom CG should raise his hands if he is free of the said corruption.obasi jnr
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