The Company Income Tax that manufacturers paid rose by 29 per cent to N62bn in the first quarter of 2023 from N44bn in the same period last year, according to reports published by the National Bureau of Statistics.
The reports showed that from all sectoral contributions,
manufacturers paid the highest income taxes, followed by information and
communication technology and financial services.
A 13 per cent increase was also recorded in Value Added Tax
raked in from manufacturers, as VAT from the sector was up from N112bn Q2022 to
N129bn within the period in review.
The increase comes as taxes paid by manufacturers to the
Federal Government rose by 60 per cent to N839.6 in 2022 from N524bn recorded
in the prior year.
Data sourced from NBS by The PUNCH showed that manufacturing
company income tax rose significantly in 2022 to N468.59 compared with N235bn
in the corresponding period in the previous year, while VAT collected from the
sector rose to N477. 43bn from N288.4bn in 2021.
The taxes (VAT & CIT) are exclusive of other duties and
levies paid by manufacturers to designated government agencies such as the
Nigeria Customs Service.
Last month, the President of the Manufacturers Association
of Nigeria, Francis Meshioye, urged the Federal Government to reverse the 2023
Fiscal Policy Measures scheduled to come into effect on June 1, 2023.
Meshioye said that the rate of the excise increase was
exponential and excessively burdensome as the FPM increased the excise on beer products
by about 200 per cent, while the tobacco industry was being taxed five times
more than other industries.
He further stated that the increase was ill-timed because
the manufacturing sector was in an acute recession and proceeds from sales were
no longer sustaining business’ overheads and operating expenses.
He said, “The rate of increase is exceptionally excessive
and not consistent with best practice globally. For instance, the excise for
beer was effectively increased by about 200 per cent, translating to a tripling
of excise on the product.
“The increase is coming at a time when the manufacturing
sector is immersed in unprecedented crisis and an acute recession, due to
extraordinary challenges, namely: sustained scarcity of naira, which has led to
a crash in consumer purchases; limited access to foreign exchange, which has
led industry to purchase foreign exchange from the parallel market, thereby
increasing costs; record inflation, which further drive up cost of operation
and prices of products and a struggling economy.”