LCCI seeks tax holiday, VAT suspension for manufactures

Fri, May 8, 2020
By publisher
3 MIN READ

Business Briefs

THE Lagos Chamber Of Commerce and Industry, LCCI, has urged the federal government to suspend the implementation of 50 percent increment in the Value Added Tax, VAT. LCCI said this would enable the government to put the economy back on track.

Toki Mabogunje, president, LCCI, who spoke during a briefing on the state of the economy in Lagos, said a year tax break should be granted for healthcare and pharmaceutical companies, airlines, manufacturers, agro-processors, small-medium enterprises, SMEs, and hospitality players. She said agro-processing companies should enjoy import waivers for the next one year, adding that it is critical to support food security and agricultural supplies.

“Commercial banks are implored to offer reprieve to businesses and corporate indebted to them. The reprieve could be in form of loan moratorium and restructuring. We urge the CBN to review the cash reserve ratio downwards to 20 percent from 27.5 percent, to enable commercial banks have more liquidity to support businesses.

“In the aviation industry, we recommend support towards augmenting insurance premiums which are dollar-denominated as cover were mostly underwritten abroad due to lack of local capacity; support to pay for operational cost, including international lease rental on grounded aircraft and maintenance (C& D-checks); full implementation of the Executive Order on Removal of VAT from Air Transportation,” she said.

Mabogunje reiterated the need for restrategising and ensuring proper coordination both at the states and federal level, urging the government to focus on the completion of critical infrastructure projects nationwide such as the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, Lagos-Ibadan rail project, Enugu Airport, the Second Niger Bridge, East-West Road, among others.

“These public goods would have significant positive impact on commercial activities and businesses as they reduce cost of doing business and boost productivity. The private sector should be encouraged and incentivized to contribute to investment in infrastructural development.”

On his part, Muda Yusuf, director general, LCCI, said the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, cannot sustain continuous protection of the naira by depleting its foreign reserves, adding that the continuous drop in oil prices weakens the naira. He pointed out that naira has been technically devalued, explaining that official devaluation will occur when the CBN can no longer have the quantum of dollar to defend the naira.

“Over the past 20 years, value-added per capita in agriculture has risen by less than 1 percent  annually and it is estimated that Nigeria has lost $10 billion in annual export opportunity due to continuous decline in the production of some commodities, according to Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

“Over the years, Food production increases have not kept pace with population growth, resulting in rising food imports and declining levels of national food self-sufficiency (FMARD, 2008). The main factors undermining production includes reliance on rain for agriculture, smallholder land holding, and low productivity due to poor planting material, low fertilizer application, and a weak agricultural extension system amongst others,” he said.

– May 8, 2020 @ 16:25 GMT |

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