Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation said that Nigeria’s tax collection is low.
Gates stated this at a Pan-African youth dialogue on nutrition in Abuja, on Tuesday.
The American business magnate is currently in Nigeria for a series of events.
Speaking at the event, Gates said the low tax collection poses a challenge to adequately financing critical sectors such as health and education.
He said for citizens to gain confidence in the government’s ability to deliver quality healthcare, there must be a commitment to ensure that the funding of health programmes is well-managed.
Bill Gates said, “Over time, Nigeria has plans to fund the government more than it does today. The actual tax collection in Nigeria is pretty low.
“If citizens want the education and the health things, as they develop the confidence that these programmes can be very well run, and our foundation is involved with a lot of the exemplars that are showing the way in terms of making sure the money is spent really well, running a very efficient primary health care system where the employees are doing great work, the centres are where they should be, you don’t have underloaded centres or overloaded centres.
“It’s exciting that we are driving the credibility of those health programmes so that the citizens will feel like primary health care is amongst the priorities that should be very funded as you get some fiscal flexibility.”
Gates’ remarks come after Taiwo Oyedele, Chairman of the Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee said his committee is proposing a law to the National Assembly to increase value-added tax from the current 7.5% to 10%.
Speaking on a Channels Television programme, he said, “We have significant issues in our tax revenue. We have issues of revenue generally which means tax and non-tax. You can describe the whole fiscal system in a state that is in crisis.
“When my committee was set up, we had three broad mandates. The first one was to look at governance: our finances as a country, borrowing, and coordination within the federal government and across sub-national.
“The second one was revenue transformation. The revenue profile of the country is abysmally low. If you dedicate our whole revenue to fixing roads it will be insufficient. The third is on government assets.
“The law we are proposing to the National Assembly has the rate of 7.5% moving to 10% from 2025. We don’t know how soon they will be able to pass the law. Then subsequent increases are also indicated in terms of the year they will kick in.
“While we are doing that, we have a corresponding reduction in personal income tax. Anybody that is earning about N1.5 million a month or less, they will see their personal income tax come down. Companies will have income tax rate come down by 30% over the next two years to 25%. That is a significant reduction.
“Other taxes they pay are quite many: IT levy, education tax, etc. All these we are consolidating into a single one. They will pay 4% initially. That will go down to 2% in the next few years.”
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