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Nigeria VAT Controversy: Ebonyi State Backs FIRS As Rivers Takes Matter to Supreme Court

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The VAT controversy between the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and Rivers State, which is increasingly escalating to involve other states, keeps introducing new episodes as Governors make decisions on which side of the matter they stand.

Ebonyi State Governor David Umahi has charted a path away from the perceived desire of Southern governors to support Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike’s struggle to stop the FIRS from collecting VAT from businesses under states’ jurisdiction. Umahi has said he is not in support of the legal tussle which has been backed by Lagos State, and Ogun State, reportedly working on a bill to give VAT collection by the state government, a legal backing.

“Ebonyi state is not in support of any state collecting VAT. We are in support that FIRS should continue to collect tax and share,” Mr Umahi was quoted as saying at a dinner in honour of a former Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai.

Following a Federal High Court ruling last month, which declared the collection of Value Added Tax in states by the federal government illegal, some states in southern Nigeria have been trying to use the opportunity to break away from the tax marriage with Abuja, which has been described as ‘unjust.’

The Rivers and Lagos state governments were swift to enact a law that will empower their states to take charge of VAT collection, and other states, including Akwa Ibom are following their steps.

However, breaking ranks with his southern counterparts, Umahi, who has been a vocal supporter of the federal government’s initiatives, said he doesn’t support the idea.

The outlet reported the governor strongly opposing the move in his address during an event held at the Governor’s Lodge, Centenary City, Abakaliki. He was quoted as saying that “evil will continue to thrive if good people keep quiet.”

“We must make Ebonyi state very exceptional by rising to the challenges. When we shout true federalism, I say, I agree. But it should be administrative restructuring,” he said.

“People are taking special interest in Ebonyi state and her governor, positively and negatively. But it is very important to be in the news than for you to say there are 36 states. You will name 35 and say, ‘what is the other state?’ We have aborted it. We are now a state to reckon with, and we have no apologies.”

Umahi’s decision to stick with the federal government is believed to emanate from Ebonyi State’s total dependence on federal allocation. The southeastern state’s 2020 internal generated revenue (IGR) of about N13 billion is among the poorest in Nigeria, and it’s the only southern state ranked among top-10 poorest states in the country.

While the Federal High Court’s VAT judgment has been hailed as a bold step to fiscal federalism, many states will not survive if it’s nationally implemented. Against this backdrop, many states, especially in the north, are rallying around the FIRS, while others in the south, who have enough IGR numbers to survive without federal allocation, are standing firm in their opposition to the tax agency.

For instance, Lagos and Rivers states have both ignored the ruling of the Appeal Court, which ordered all parties in the VAT case to maintain the status quo. While the Lagos State Government proceeds with all moves to collect VAT, the Rivers State Government has taken the FIRS to the Supreme Court, challenging the appellate court order.

Rivers State wants the Supreme Court to order that the substantive appeal by FIRS be heard and determined by a fresh panel of the Court of Appeal.

Rivers is also requesting the apex court to set aside the ruling made by the appellate court, which ordered the state to stop VAT collection pending the determination of an appeal filed by the FIRS.

Nigerian Government Goes Ecommerce, Looking for $75 Billion; Two Things To Consider

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It is a very beautiful vision and one we must commend and support: “The Federal Government has said that it is targeting an increase in e-commerce trading, from the current market value of $13bn to about $75bn by 2025. The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr Evelyn Ngige, who disclosed this on Tuesday in Abuja at the second National E-commerce Roundtable organised by the ministry noted that e-commerce had grown from 14 percent in 2019 to 17 percent in 2020.”

This is how great things happen provided we can walk the talk. The future of markets in Nigeria would be digital because the transition from meatspace to the digital space will continue for decades. Yes, Nigeria has decades-long opportunities to redesign its industries and commerce is a big component.

Yet, if Nigeria wants to make this $75 billion ecommerce business come to pass, it has to do two things: fix postal service (PPP or joint venture with private sector) and stimulate ecommerce spending.

In the United States, they used the initial sales tax waiver collection to make things online cheaper. In other words, because the old Amazon was not required to collect local sales tax, things in Amazon were cheaper than your neighbourhood store. 

If you spend $1000 on Amazon, you do not have to pay an extra $80 sales tax unlike in your local store which is required to collect it. And with free shipping, many would wait for the extra two days it would take Amazon to ship the items, to save that $80. So over time, ecommerce became a destination for shopping. American policy seeded that redesign.

The second part is that without a good postal service, there is nothing like a dynamic ecommerce sector at the consumer level (B2B ecommerce is flourishing). The marginal cost of an ecommerce business is captured by transaction and distribution costs. The distribution cost is physical (yes, you have to actually move the item from the warehouse to the buyer) and the internet will not solve that cost element. So, without a postal service in Nigeria, we cannot have a dynamic ecommerce since participants would be required to build huge logistical systems. Not many have that resource. So, Nigeria needs to get the postal service working for us to touch that $75 billion.

Doable? Yes if we focus on some pillars and anchors. In short, $75 billion is very small. The total consumer spending in Nigeria is close to $350 billion yearly; we have rooms to digitize.

Available Tracks In Tekedia Advanced Diploma Programs

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Tekedia Institute offers many tracks in the Advanced Diploma programs which run for 8 weeks. A track has no Live Zoom session, and it is completely self-paced and online. Upon payment, you have immediate access to start learning. The program includes class notes, flash cases and videos. Here are the tracks:

Advanced Diploma in Logistics & Supply Chain Management
Advanced Diploma in Business Innovation, Growth & Sustainability
Advanced Diploma in Project Management
Advanced Diploma in Risk Management
Advanced Diploma in Business Administration
Advanced Diploma in Innovation & Design Thinking
Advanced Diploma in Accounting, Auditing, Forensics & Taxation

Cost: Each track costs $100 or N36,000 naira per participant. Register here.

Big News Coming for ex-President Goodluck Jonathan And His Political Future

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Some major events in the next coming days in Nigeria. I take you back to this post and the Dec 2020 one. Politics is a permanent interest game, no enemy and no friend.

In December 2020, I wrote, thus: “It seems some politically sagacious northern states’ governors in Nigeria’s ruling party, APC, want former President Goodluck Jonathan to be APC presidential flagbearer in 2023, if Jonathan agrees to decamp from PDP to APC. Lol. That is really unfair as Ndubuisi Ekekwe has not even tasted any water in Aso Rock, and they are focusing on making more presidents out of former presidents. Haba Nigeria….Obasanjo, Buhari…and Jonathan.

It does not sound really crazy if you look at the permutation: Jonathan can only serve a single term. Period. And if that is the case, he is the only Southern Nigeria politician that would make it possible for many governors from the north to have a chance in 2027.”

As a school teacher, do I have a chance in a nation whose mission is to make more presidents out of the former presidents? Lol.

Details of the new iPhone 13

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Here are the new products Apple announced today, plus their prices and launch dates:

  • iPad – Starts at $329. Available next week.
  • iPad mini – Starts at $499. Available next week.
  • Apple Watch Series 7 – $399. Available later this fall.
  • iPhone 13 Mini – Starts at $699.
  • iPhone 13 – Starts at $799.
  • iPhone 13 Pro – Starts at $999.
  • iPhone 13 Pro Max – $1,099. All new iPhones will be available September 24.

The 6.1-inch iPhone 13 Pro and 6.7-inch iPhone 13 Pro Max feature the same A15 Bionic chip as the iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 mini. But it also packs in a five-core CPU, promising 50% faster graphics which should appeal to many gamers. The Pro devices also feature a bright Super Retna XDR display with a faster refresh rate, and all-day battery life.

The camera system got a solid refresh, too. It comes with a new 77 mm telephoto lens with 3 times optical zoom as well as new wide and ultrawide cameras.

The Pro and Pro Max start at $999 and $1,099, respectively, and come in graphite, gold, silver and sierra blue.

Apple unveiled the 6.1-inch iPhone 13 and 5.4-inch iPhone 13 mini at its closely watched media event on Tuesday. The devices feature a new look with a dual-camera system, which are arranged diagonally.

The iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 mini run on the A15 Bionic chip and feature longer-lasting batteries. Apple said the iPhone 13 will last 2.5 hours longer than the iPhone 12 and the iPhone 13 mini will go 1.5 hours longer on a single charge. Other updates include a more efficient display, an updated 5G chip, and an option called Cinematic Mode, which is like the popular Portrait mode feature but for videos.

The iPhone 13 mini will start at $699 for 128 GB (more storage for its base model than ever before) and the iPhone 13 will cost $799, starting with 128 GB.

The smartphones come in five new colors: pink, blue, black, white and red.