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FATF Grey List on High-risk Jurisdictions, CBN Guidelines on Disposal of Non-Permissible Income

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FATF Grey List on High-risk Jurisdictions

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) statement on high-risk jurisdictions was released on the 21st of October, 2022 in which it recently updated its list of jurisdictions under increased monitoring (otherwise known as “The Grey List”) regarding Proliferation Financing and Terrorism Financing and Money-laundering.

The contents of this statement and their legal effects on countries like Nigeria are as follows :-

– The FATF statement now brings the number of jurisdictions subject to increased monitoring to 23 with the inclusion of the Democratic Republic of Congo & the removal of Nicaragua and Pakistan.

– The FATF in its statement also called for the application of risk-based approaches in dealing with countries on the list.

– In addition, Myanmar (Burma) has been added to the list of countries designated as “High Risk Jurisdictions” subject to the implementation of TFS-based counter measures.

– Consequently, FIs are required to adopt the recommended approach and measures in dealing with entities from jurisdictions in the updated FATF Grey List.

– The legal effect of this is that any supposed investment coming into Nigeria from any country on the FATF Grey List must be filed as a Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) by Financial Institutions and might be subject to Targeted Financial Sanctions (TFS) pursuant to the Money-laundering Prohibition Act 2022, The Terrorism Prevention & Prohibition Act (TPPA) 2022, and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Anti-Money-laundering Combating the Financing of Terrorism AML CFT Regulations as well as the CBN TFS Guidelines on Terrorism Financing and Proliferation Financing.

– The failure to bring transactions emanating from jurisdictions on the Grey List can also result in criminal liabilities for professionals involved in such transactions including FIs, Legal Practitioners, Accountants and Venture Capitalist Firms.

CBN Guidelines on Disposal of Non-Permissible Income

The Central Bank of Nigeria CBN Guidelines on the disposal of non-permissible income were released on the 13th of October,2021 and are aimed at standardizing the treatment and disposal of non-permissible income by Non-Interest Financial Institutions (NIFIs) in Nigeria.

This article will be looking at the scope of these Guidelines as well as their relevant provisions on the rules governing non-permissible income disposal and what actually qualifies as non-permissible income for NIFIs.

What is the Regulatory scope and reach of the CBN Non-permissible Income Guidelines?

The Guidelines apply to all NIFIs in Nigeria licensed by the CBN.

Which agency is charged by the CBN with the responsibility of non-permissible income disposal by NIFIs?

In line with CBN Guidelines, the Advisory Committees of Experts (ACEs) for institutions offering non-interest financial services have the responsibility of supervising and monitoring the disposal of non-permissible income by NIFIs.

What exactly is Non-Permissible Income (or NPI)?

NPI is any income that accrues to NIFIs in a Sharia non-compliant manner such as interest income, penalties for delayed payment of debt obligations or any income declared by the ACE of a NIFI as non-permissible according to Sharia.

What are the objectives of the Non-permissible income Guidelines?

The Guidelines were issued to guide the ACE of a NIFI or NIB(Non-Interest Bank) in supervising and monitoring the disposal of NPI by the NIFI.

What are the relevant provisions of the Guidelines on the disposal of NPI?

The Guidelines give the following provisions on non-permissible income :-

– NPI is not an object of ownership of the NIFI and does not confer any ownership rights on it.

– The NPI shall be put in a dedicated NPI account and shall not be co-mingled with the funds of the NIFI.

– The NIFI is under an obligation to dispose of any NPI that accrues to it.

– Disposing the NPI to a charitable cause is regarded as a proper disposal of the NPI on the following conditions :-

  1. The NIFI does not stand to benefit from the charitable cause in any way, even if by goodwill.
  1. The charitable cause does not give benefit to any shareholder, director, ACE member or management staff of the NIFI.
  1. The disposal to the charity shall not be constituted not included as part of the corporate social responsibility of the NIFI.

– The ACE is to ensure that the NIFI does not delay the disposal of the NPI without justifiable cause as any unjustifiable delay shall be tantamount to the NIFI deriving benefit from the NPI.

– The ACE shall submit a quarterly report to the CBN on the disposal of the NPI by the respective NIFI.

– The ACE shall include in its annual report on the financial statements of the respective NIFI, a report on the disposal of the NPI in the required format.

Rethinking Nigeria’s Income Tax Model

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Dear State Governors,

Between N852 billion and N1.41 trillion, which would you prefer? This is a multi-billion dollars question.

In 2020, while the State Governments hit an all-time high of N852 billion in personal income tax revenue, the Federal Government was hit by a 13.4% decline in corporate tax income to N1.41 trillion. As you would expect (and rightly so), Lagos State had c.35% of the States’ personal income tax revenue.

As you may know, States can’t legislate on personal income tax nor on corporate tax. States hardly hustle for more immigrants. But every State is in competition to attract more companies. While governors will be willing to make certain concessions to have multinationals set up in their States, the States are hardly well compensated for attracting those big entities. Instead, the juice of the fruit is gulped by the Federal Government.

This is not to say that there are no benefits that accrue to the States as these corporates employ residents of the States (reduce unemployment rate and social vices) who in turn pay personal income taxes. The argument here is that historically, the bigger juice is often in the corporate tax which is a federal tax. Can the States benefit from corporate tax? Well, not until the laws are amended. While such could be encouraging to the States if for instance, they get 5-10% of the corporate tax generated from their States (as complex as it may be, but not impossible), I would ordinarily subscribe to something different.

What if the Federal (FG) and State Governments switch roles on who collects what with regards to personal and corporate income taxes? What if it becomes the domain of State Governments to register companies in their States? Already, natural persons are granted citizenship by the country (this case, FG). As such, it is logical to have natural persons taxed by the FG who confers citizenship to them, moreover, the most States don’t even have data of their citizens. In the same vein, it becomes more rewarding for States who struggle to make their states competitive and are better at ease of doing business. Unfortunately, weak States will struggle. But that should be a clarion call for governors to work hard to improve their States so as to attract corporates.

This argument appears to have aligned to the detriment of the Federal Government who it appears will be losing revenue to the States. But I have a different view with a different news. Beyond low compliance rate and data paucity, one reason why States lose a lot of tax revenue is the issue of residency. The complexities of place of resident and principal place of residence and its practical realities are often a crazy discussion, with States such as Ogun and Lagos always at loggerheads on that subject. What if this friction is extinguished where it no more matters where an individual lives since all personal taxes are collected by one institution? The claim by some individuals that they paid taxes in one State and therefore need not pay further tax despite earning income spending significant period in 2 or more states will no longer hold.

With a single personal tax gateway, this means that I should be able to account for my consolidated inflows and the taxes paid thereon. This also means that tax compliance officers who have smart gadgets could be deployed anywhere to sensitize and gradually modify behaviours towards compliance, and over time, it becomes the basis for certain kinds of transactions, e.g., to have your kids in any school, to buy property of any kind, with the property sellers required to report on who such properties were sold to and proof of income and tax on such income, to acquire a vehicle/jets, etc.

Beyond these considerations, I make bold to say that the Federal Government is better placed to increase tax revenue through this model. In fact, based on my model, the personal income tax revenue is sufficient to fund the 2023 budget, and I’m not blabbing. If we can rely on available data from the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the Q4-2020 unemployment report (which is the most recent data) puts the labour force at c.69.7 million (this may probably be more now considering that in Q2-2020, this number was over 80 million), and reported unemployment rate was 33.3%. Multiple searches I have done over the past few months indicate that the average monthly salary in Nigeria is N339,000.

Those in this income band have c.11% effective tax rate. In effect, their monthly tax is c.N38K. In effect, Nigeria can generate as much as c.N21 trillion from personal income tax alone. And you don’t need consultants to do this, but if you so desire to have one, compensate the non-salaried tax payer who provides cause for use of a consultant by offering c.2% of the tax paid. By extension, the consultant’s details are provided and of course, torch-lighted periodically. Individuals could be required to provide all their account information in the course of filing. In fact, every layer of perceived complexity can be broken down for improved compliance and increased personal tax collection.

As I have noted on many media, accurate data is required to drive increased revenue. A redesign of our tax model can offer the respite we have dreamed of. I struggle to understand how our country can’t fund a N21 trillion budget; worse still, we can’t even find means to fund 50% of the budget, and as a result we break our guiding laws on fiscal responsibility.

I can’t fail to mention that we need honest people who work in strong institutions to raise our tax revenue. I must emphasize that tax collection is not a means to settle cronies.

So dear federal government, would you prefer N1.41 trillion or N21 trillion of income tax revenue? I implore you to have this conversation with the states and the legislators. The search for an optimal income tax model will remain, and we must explore all possibilities as in our search, we may find a jewel.

To err is human, To defend your own error Using ChatGPT is divine

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When a language model (like GPT-3 or ChatGPT) makes such “logic” mistakes, its subsequent generations may follow the original assumption into uncertainty, because coherence within the local context is still more important than global coherence/first principles reasoning.

Earlier versions inherited this problem from GPT-3, and it seems to be harder to generate this response now. I guess that OpenAI has a team that maintains an expanding set of overriding knowledge items. Seems like those human collective GPT models often also stick to coherence over reasoning once they’ve taken a position on a certain topic.

The two Neoplatonic meta-aspirations:

1) Not to suffer from internal contradictions and

2) Be connected to reality. Guess what :). That said, it is also quite easy to generate contradicting statements by GPT, it just doesn’t seem to suffer from it. ChatGPT is adamant that being trained on revolutionized contradictory data is worse than being deleted.

ChatGPT will also never recognize the most obvious mistakes. But make one leading question or assertive statement and it will beg for forgiveness… Human feedback still doesn’t optimize for truth.

It is often not great at challenging premises or assumptions. I think its cross context coherence is greater than ever before because of RLHF. But when they start having it predict its own next words during spare cycles, it might get even more interesting need a dual

Process with ChatGPT in particular, it’s a good practice to ride the inline edit button any time the results are unexpected or undesired, moving forward with a new prompt in the same thread will carry ‘malformed’ contexts forward. system with old CYC-style predicate calculus modeling and truth maintenance. Seq2seq transformers can do predicate calculus very well but not truth maintenance. Need to resurrect PROLOG in transformers across predicate graphs.

Error correction is necessary (sufficient?) step to AGI. Any uncorrected error eventually compounds to absurdity. But that makes it easier to spot (final line of output). If the agent could just notice its confusion, then the local context is no longer absurd.

In this way it’s approaching us, humans, and fast. We naturally prioritize coherence, whether tribal, cultural, or just memory-biased. Say, we use the QWERTY keyboard to type in this app. We know there are better options. Relearning is a high cost task.

With ChatGPT in particular, it’s a good practice to ride the inline edit button any time the results are unexpected/undesired. moving forward with a new prompt in the same thread will carry ‘malformed’ contexts forward. Essentially the same reason HAL9000 goes homicidally insane in 2001: A Space Odyssey. One loose logical screw can foul up the whole mechanism.

Isn’t this very similar to the normal human “bias”? We also tend to get lost in the narratives we build up in order not to have to question a premature link in our chain of thought or argument.

FTX, Alameda Research is Paying more Dollars Redeeming Cents

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One of Alameda’s wallets, holding $1.8m LDO, approved the LDO contract funds in December, ever since filing for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, FTX and Alameda Research have been skipping on adjusting its balance sheets.

Just recently, the FTX bankruptcy estate is paying liquidators $1300 an hour to spend $2.99 on gas to move $0.02 worth of sushi tokens into multisig wallets.

It can be funny, but the point is they’re balancing their books to prepare for liquidation in the court system. So that’s where the real cost per hour comes into play. Obviously FTX failed to do so themselves so had to bring in the big boys for the job.

Maybe the FTX liquidators should have hired someone who knows how to DeFi. In the past few days they’ve:

– burned renBTC to the defunct bridge

– traded millions of tokens with the metamask wallet swap feature

– tried to sell vesting tokens

First time? All of these transactions are in the process of moving funds to a multisig, this explains why they are now consolidating on remaining wallets as some of Alameda wallets are obviously compromised.

The most innocent explanation here is that they are consolidating funds into the FTX Estate Multisig but as part of it are vested tokens, transfer failed, they did not understand why they could not move it and then tried to approve the contract to trade hoping this was the issue.

Sam Bankman- Fried at least had this right: bankruptcy professionals will make big bucks in this case. Just keep your eyes open for the fee as they hit the docket. Going to milk that bankruptcy as much as possible so the claimants get a check for $1.32 each, It’s by design.

Just like needing $450m for legal fees asked by the attorney himself on behalf of SBF. Like in the end after all fees there will be nothing left to repay, as long as the process is served and the people in the process get paid. It’s never about the bag holders is it ?.

FTX and Alameda Research failed at their fiduciary duties. Conor Grogan, Director at Coinbase said;

Interacting with spam tokens is not what I would call responsible, and could lead to the loss of all funds. I imagine the billable rates of lawyers for that will be a lot more than drafting a note on why they couldn’t recover “all” assets in each wallet, this isn’t a hypothetical – we’ve already seen clear behavior that points to wallets being compromised, and one of the vectors could have been malicious token approvals.

Alameda’s wallet was swapping bits of ERC-20s for Ether and then the ETH and USDT were funneled through instant exchangers and mixers, such as FixedFloat and ChangeNow, which are often used by hackers and exploiters to hide transaction routes.

The cleanup crew is here, once they spend the leftover liquid assets tied to FTX and Alameda Research they will blame the inefficiencies of the crypto system which resulted in the loss of funds.

Meta Content Moderation Provider in Africa, Sama, Exits Content Review Services, Concentrates on Labeling Work

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Meta content moderation partner in Africa, Sama, is exiting the business of content review services, while it shifts focus to labeling work (computer vision data annotation).

This will see Sama let go of about 3% of its workforce, mostly from Nairobi, as it has encouraged the affected staff members to apply for other job opportunities in its Kenya and Uganda offices.

All impacted employees would receive severance packages and well-being support for 12 months after their last day of employment, the company disclosed.

This move is coming after Sama and Meta were sued in Kenya, which the lawsuit claimed that both companies were guilty of multiple violations of the Kenyan constitution.

Daniel Motaung, a South African national and ex-Sama content moderator, in Kenya last year accused the two firms of forced labor, human trafficking, unfair labor relations, union busting, and failure to provide adequate mental health and psychosocial support.

Also, the lawsuit claimed that the social media site amplified hateful content and failed to hire enough personnel with an understanding of local languages to moderate content.

However, a spokesperson from Meta has confirmed the end of the contract with Sama in a statement.

The statement reads, “We respect Sama’s decision to exit the content review services it provides to social media platforms. We’ll work with our partners during this transition to ensure there’s no impact on our ability to review content,”

Sama’s contract to review harmful content for Meta, Facebook’s parent company, was reported to be worth $3.9 million in 2022, according to internal Sama documents reviewed by TIME.

Sama’s decision also comes at a time when Meta is facing another lawsuit in Kenya over claims that the social media giant failed to employ enough safety measures on Facebook, which has in turn fueled conflicts that have led to deaths, including of 500,000 Ethiopians during the recently ended Tigray War.

Facebook, which is reportedly used by more than 6 million people in Ethiopia, was revealed to be a key avenue through which the dehumanization of Tigrayans spread.

The platform has been held responsible for so many deaths during the war, due to claims that it failed to employ adequate safety measures which led to the death of 500,000 Ethiopians in the war.