A court ruling in one of Nigeria’s oil-producing states may cost the federal government control of a major source of tax revenue, to the detriment of the West African nation’s poorer regions.
A court ruling in one of Nigeria’s oil-producing states may cost the federal government control of a major source of tax revenue, to the detriment of the West African nation’s poorer regions.
A judge on Monday dismissed an application by the Federal Inland Revenue Service to delay the execution of an order issued last month that allows the government of the southern Rivers state to collect value-added tax within its territory. FIRS said it’s appealing the ruling.
VAT accounted for 1.53 trillion naira ($3.7 billion) of the federal government’s 4.95 trillion tax take last year, data from the National Bureau of Statistics show. The kind of VAT that the nation’s 36 states could administer following the ruling would account for almost half that amount.
The federal court decision will help Nigeria’s states “reduce the outdated over-reliance on pitiable federal allocation and other handouts,” Nyesom Wike, the Rivers state governor, told a media briefing. “The benefit derivable from this case by all the states in the long run far outweighs the immediate revenue loss that some states may presently suffer.”
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