Oil price crash: Private jets owners to pay more taxes
The rich will be hard hit by new measures to save the economy, which has been badly shaken by falling oil prices.
Private jet owners are to pay more taxes. So are lovers of luxury items, such as champagne.
Other measures announced yesterday by the Federal Government are
freezing of foreign travel for civil servants, slash of budget oil benchmark and drop in capital projects financing.
Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala announced the measures in
Abuja, saying it is important for Nigeria to keep an eye on oil prices
because the importance of oil to the country’s economy. Oil is the
backbone of Nigeria’s economy.
According to her, the Medium Term
Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and the 2015 budget proposal before the
National Assembly have been revised. The Federal Government is now
proposing a benchmark of $73 dollars per barrel compared to the proposed
$78.
The Excess Crude Account has $4.11 billion down from $11.5 billion at the start of 2013.
Government’s projected revenue for 2015 is $6.83 trillion lower than
the $7.288 billion initially targetted for the outgoing year.
A projected expenditure for 2015 is N4.66 trillion down 2.92 per cent from 2014’s.
Dr. Okonjo-Iweala said: “Given the nature of the oil market, we needed
to see the extent and trend of the oil price in order to take the right
measures. Panic is not a strategy. It’s important that our strategies
are based on facts and a clear understanding of both the strengths of
the economy and the challenges posed by the drop in oil price, which is
currently at $79 for our premium Bonny Light Crude.
”The drop in oil
prices is a serious challenge which we must confront as a country. We
must be prepared to make sacrifices where necessary. But we should also
not forget that we retain some important advantages such as a broad
economic base driven by the private sector and anchored on sound
policies. Our strategy is to continue to strengthen the sectors that
drive growth, such as agriculture and housing while reducing waste with a
renewed focus on prudence.”
According to Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala, the
decline in oil prices has given additional impetus to the Federal
Government’s focus on increasing non-oil revenues. In this regard, the
collection target for the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), which
has been working with Mckinsey to increase receipts will be revised
upwards for next year. The country has had good success in reaching the
initial target set this year of N75 billion; so far N65 billion of this
has been collected. For 2015, the revised target is N160 billion above
the 2014 base.
As part of the efforts to reduce expenditure,
international travel within the public service will be severely
curtailed. From next year, only critical foreign travels will be allowed
with the permission of Head of Service of the Federation (HoS).
“Any other foreign travel would have to be funded by those inviting
civil or public servants and all expenses paid by the inviting body.
Same goes for training, local training will be encouraged but expenses
for foreign training will be borne by inviting foreign host with
permission sought from HoS. Evidence of sponsorship detailing all
expenses paid for by inviting body must be tendered before the HoS will
grant approval.”
The minister said there will be a drop in some capital spending, but critical infrastructure projects will not be affected.
Investment in infrastructure, job creation and security will not
change, but there will be prioritised investment in those with
significant economic impact, such as Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Second
Niger Bridge and rail projects.
The implementation of the new
mortgage system including the current processing of over 66,000
applicants for mortgages, will go on as planned, she said.
Also
unaffected are public sector wages and key initiatives in education,
health and other areas critical to the country’s human development.
Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said she was “not sure of what direction to take
with taxes but that a key initiative on the revenue side is a surcharge
on luxury items. The details are being worked out. The government’s
efforts from now, she said, will be to increase Internally Generated
Revenue (IGR) of entities and ensure that they remit these IGRs on time
to government coffers. “This economy has to stop talking about oil” she
said.
The minister noted that there would be surcharges on luxury
items, such as champaigne, private jets and yachts, so that those
well-to-do individuals can contribute more to the government’s
treasury.
Also Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) that make
surpluses will now be made to remit such surpluses immediately to
government accounts while some taxes will be adjusted to enhance
revenue.
On calls from some quarters that the Federal Government
should respond to the decline in revenues arising from the drop in oil
prices by printing more naira to fund projects, the Coordinating
Minister said the government could not adopt such measures.
She said
such prescriptions ignore the facts of history as well as the
elementary principles of economics. ”Printing money without adequate
revenue support will lead to serious consequences for the country. It
will spur spiral inflation as the experiences of Germany in the early
part of the last century and, more recently, Argentina and Zimbabwe
demonstrate. This prescription will victimize the poor and middle class
that it is supposedly protecting.”
Should oil price fall to $70 or
lower, the government, Mrs Okonjo-Iweala said, has additional measures
to ensure soft landing for the economy, which, she insists “continues to
exhibit strength but government will not compensate by borrowing or
printing currency but will borrow at very low interest rate and no large
domestic borrowing”.
Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala explained that the best way
to protect the interest of the ordinary people is to control inflation
as much as possible, expand the economic base, strengthen the sectors
that drive growth, boost critical infrastructure and create more jobs.
The External Reserve, she said, “is now at $37 billion and is still
reasonably good”. She said the government would spend part of the Excess
Crude Account (ECA) on some transparent transactions. “We might tap
into half of the ECA between now and the new year. We have arrears on
subsidy pending when this will be addressed,” Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said.
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11/17/2014
Oil price crash: Private jets owners to pay more taxes
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