FIRS Ordered To Sanction Taxpayers Who Can’t Access IT

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Federal Government has ordered the  Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS)  to sanction noncompliant taxpayers refusing access to information technology (IT) systems.

Speaking during a public presentation of the approved 2022 Budget, in Abuja, Minister of Finance,  Budget  and National Planning, Mrs Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, said  that FIRS might deploy both proprietary and third-party technology applications to collect information from taxpayers. FIRS should “introduce turnover tax on fair  and  reasonable percentage of profits earned from providing digital services to Nigerian customers” she said.

Meanwhile, the government will spend N462 billion,  being   3 per cent of the 2022 Budget,  for social investments / poverty reduction programme.

Similarly,  defence and  security sector  will gulp N2.29 trillion which is  13.4 per cent  of the budget.

“The amount is  provisioned for the military, police, intelligence and  para-military (recurrent and  capital”, the minister said. Also, infrastructure  has N1.42 trillion which is 8.3 per cent of the budget, she said, adding that infrastructure include, works and housing, power (inclusive of Power Sector Recovery Operations (PSRP) provisions), transport, water resources,

On  debt sustainability, the minister further noted that the government is making efforts  to fix  the revenue challenge, because cutting expenditure is not currently a viable option, as the  public expenditure /Gross Domestic Products (GDP) ratio is also the lowest among  Africa’s leading economies.

“We must,  however,  continue to rationalise our expenditures as we cannot afford waste. In reality, our largest expenditure items are currently personnel cost, debt

service and capital expenditure, which between them account for 85 per cent  of the 2022 Budget. There is very little scope for cut in any of these over the medium term;

“The most viable solution to our fiscal challenge, therefore. remains to grow our revenues and plug all leakages.

“Our target over the medium term is to grow our revenue-to-GDP ratio from about 8-9 per cent currently to 15 per cent by 2025. At that level of revenues.

t service-to-revenue ratio will cease to be a critical concern” she said.

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