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18% tax-to-GDP ratio: We won’t increase taxes, FIRS boss assures companies

18% tax-to-GDP ratio: We won’t increase taxes, FIRS boss assures companies

Zacch Adedeji, the acting chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), has reassured corporate organizations that FIRS’s commitment to raising the country’s tax-to-GDP ratio from 10.86% to 18% would not lead to increase taxes.


This was contained in a statement issued on Thursday, October 19, by his special adviser on media and communication, Dare Adekanmbi. 

Adedeji said such resolve would not necessarily lead to increase in taxes or introduction of new taxes as the President Bola Tinubu-led administration is determined to create a wholesome environment for businesses to flourish.

The FIRS chairman had said the agency under his leadership would in the next three years achieve an eight per cent raise in tax-to-GDP ratio to surpass Africa’s average of 16.5% without stifling investment or economic growth.

The plan had triggered muffled apprehensions among entities corporate that the decision could cause an increase in tax rates or introduction of new ones.

Addressing representatives of top large tax-paying companies during a get-together at Four Points by Sheraton in Lagos on Wednesday, Adedeji said, “Our belief, understanding and vision as a revenue-generating agency is not to introduce any new tax as we only want to use data to improve compliance.”

The statement quoted the FIRS chairman as saying that the invited companies and those willing to voluntarily carry out  their tax obligations have nothing to be afraid of.

He said: “Our plan is simple. We want to grow tax revenue and we only want to tax prosperity and not poverty.

Therefore, it is not in our interest to kill the trees that bear the fruits. My first ‘love letter’ to you is to apprecihate what you have done. So, you don’t have anything to be afraid of.

“We will not collect what is not due to us. But we don’t want anyone not to pay what is due to us. Fair engagement is our plan. Rest assured that the 18% tax-to-GDP target will not translate to increase in taxes.

“If you have been listening to Mr Taiwo Oyedele who is the chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms, you will have known that part of the mandate of the committee is to reduce the number of taxes.”

According to him, the purpose of the engagement with the companies is to factor their inputs into the strategic action plan being mapped out in order to address challenges hampering tax revenue collection.

He lauded the invited companies for their high sense of responsibility, urging them to continue to discharge their tax obligation diligently.  


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