INTRODUCTION
Researchers and different authors
have debated for many years about the most economically beneficial mix of
property taxes for United kingdom and Nigeria. Changes to property taxation are
rare and are almost always politically contentious.
This work discuss difference as
well as the similarity between the United kingdom property taxation policies
and that of the Nigerian property taxation policies in the widest possible
context and also discuss the broader economic and political issues that would
come into play if there were substantive similarities as well as difference
between the two property tax laws.
DEFINITION
Taxes may also be defined as a "pecuniary
burden laid upon individuals or property to support government expenditure. A
tax "is not a voluntary payment or donation, but an enforced and
compulsory contribution, exacted pursuant to legislative authority" and is
"any contribution imposed by government”, whether under the name of duty,
custom excise, levy or other name.
Rating originated in
England as far back as the year 1601 and was given legal authority by the Poor
Relief Act. The payment of rates was for the support of persons unable to
maintain themselves.
The modern property tax,
according to Glenn W. Fisher (2006) of Wichita State University (U.S.A.), had
roots in feudal obligations owned to British and European kings or landlords.
In the United Kingdom, the tax developed into system of “rates” based on
the annual (rental) value of property which make property taxation in the UK as
higher than all other developed countries and already formed a high proportion
of the tax base.
TAXATION POLICY
The National Tax Policy is a
document, which sets broad parameters for taxation and other ancillary matters
connected with taxation. It is a clear statement on the principles governing
tax administration and revenue collection. It therefore, provides a set of
guidelines, rules and modus operandi that would regulate taxation in a country.
PROPERTY
TAX IN NIGERIA
Taxes may be direct or indirect and
may be imposed on individual basis, on entities, on assets and on transactional
basis. In Nigeria, taxes are imposed on the following bases:
On
Individuals
·
Personal
Income Tax – imposed on the income of all Nigeria
citizens or residents who derive income in Nigeria and outside Nigeria
·
Development
Levy – a flat charge imposed on every
taxable person typically within a State
On
Companies (Corporate Entities)
·
Companies
Income Tax – imposed on the profits of all
corporate entities who are registered in Nigeria or derive income from Nigeria,
other than those engaged in petroleum operations
·
Petroleum
Profits Tax – imposed on the profits of all
corporate entities registered in Nigeria or who derive income from oil and gas
operations in Nigeria
·
Education Tax –
imposed on all corporate entities registered in Nigeria
·
Technology
Levy – imposed on selected corporate
entities (telecommunication companies, internet service providers, pension
managers, banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions within a
specified turnover range) in Nigeria to support nationwide development of
technology infrastructure and capacity
On
Transactions
·
Value
Added Tax – imposed on the net sales value of
non-exempt, qualifying goods and services in Nigeria
·
Capital
Gains Tax – imposed on capital gains derived from
sale or disposal of chargeable assets.
·
Stamp
Duty – imposed on instruments executed by
individuals and corporate entities in Nigeria
·
Excise
Duty – imposed on the manufacture of
specified goods within the Government territory collected by the Nigeria
Customs Service
·
Import
Duty – imposed on the import of goods into
the Government territory collected by the Nigeria Customs Service
·
Export
Duty – imposed on the export of goods outside
the Government territory collected by the Nigeria Customs Service.
On
Assets
This includes taxes, such as
property tax and other such taxes imposed on land or landed property.
TAXATION IN
THE UNITED KINGDOM
Taxation in the United Kingdom may involve payments to a minimum of two
different levels of government: the central
government (HM Revenue and Customs) and local
government.
Central
government revenues come primarily from income tax, National Insurance contributions, value added tax, corporation
tax and fuel duty. Local government revenues come primarily from grants from
central government funds, business
rates in England and Wales, Council Tax and
increasingly from fees and charges such as those from on-street
parking. In the fiscal year 2007-08,
total government revenue was 39% of GDP, with net taxes and National Insurance contributions standing at 37% of
GDP approximately £600 billion (using 2008 nominal GDP measured in
dollars, and converting using 2009 conversion rate).
i. Income tax: Income tax is the single largest source of government revenue, making up about 30% of the total, followed by National Insurance contributions at around 20%.
ii. Inheritance tax: Inheritance tax is levied on "transfers of value", meaning:
1.
the estates
of deceased persons;
3.
"lifetime
chargeable transfers", meaning transfers into certain types of trust. See Taxation
of trusts (United Kingdom).
iii.
Council Tax: Council tax
is the system of local taxation used in England, Scotland and Wales to part fund the services provided by local government in
each country. It was introduced in 1993 by the Local
Government Finance Act 1992, as a
successor to the unpopular Community Charge
("poll tax"), which had (briefly) replaced the Rates system.
iv.
Value added tax: The
third largest source of government revenues is value added
tax (VAT), charged at 20% on supplies of
goods and services. It is therefore a tax on consumer expenditure.
v.
Excise duties: Excise duties are
charged on, amongst other things, motor fuel, alcohol, tobacco, betting and vehicles.
vi.
Stamp duty: Stamp duty is charged
on the transfer of shares and certain securities at a rate of 0.5%. Modernised versions of stamp duty, stamp duty land tax and stamp duty reserve tax, are charged respectively on the transfer of real property and
shares and securities, at rates of up to 4% and 0.5% respectively.
vii. Motoring Taxation: Motoring taxes include: fuel duty (which itself also attracts VAT), and vehicle excise duty. Other fees and charges include the London congestion charge, various statutory fees including that for the compulsory vehicle test and that for vehicle registration, and in some areas on-street parking (as well as associated charges for violations).
viii. Corporate Tax: UK corporate tax revenue as a percentage of GDP compared to the OECD and the EU 15. Corporation tax is a tax levied in the United Kingdom on the profits made by companies and on the profits of permanent establishments of non-UK resident companies and associations that trade in the EU.
ix. Business rates: Business rates is the commonly used name of non-domestic rates, a United Kingdom rate or tax charged to occupiers of non-domestic property. Business rates form part of the funding for local government, and are collected by them, but rather than receipts being retained directly they are pooled centrally and then redistributed.
x. Business and personal taxes: Some taxes are, depending on the circumstances, paid by both individuals and companies and government
xi. National Insurance contributions: The second largest source of government revenues is National Insurance contributions (NICs). NICs are payable by employees, employers and the self-employed and in the 2010-2011 tax year £96.5 billion was raised, 21.5% of the total collected by HMRC.
CURRENT
TAX POLICY IN NIGERIA
The National (Nigeria) Tax Policy
seeks to provide a set of guidelines, rules and modus operand that would
regulate Nigeria’s tax system and provide a basis for tax legislation and tax
administration in Nigeria.
The Policy is an initiative of the
Federal Government of Nigeria which is being driven by the Federal Ministry of
Finance.
THE STATE POLICY ON
TAXATION
1.
The State shall direct its taxation policy make tax returns with the towards
ensuring that the tax system promotes fiscal responsibility and accountability
to Nigerians. Accordingly, the tax system shall reflect the principle of Fiscal
Federalism by ensuring that:
(a) Each
tier of government benefits in the sharing of revenue realised from its jurisdiction; and
(b) That
there is an equitable sharing formula for taxes collected by the Government of
the Federation, as provided in this Constitution.
2. The Government
of the Federation shall ensure a periodic review of the tax laws and
administration in Nigeria.
3.
It shall be the duty of government at all levels to ensure that:
a.
Revenue agencies are
granted autonomy and adequate funding to meet their day to day activities.
b.
the right of all tax
payers are recognized, whether they are Nigeria citizens or not.
c.
Tax evasion is
eradicated, while tax avoidance is minimized at all levels of government, and
d.
Multiple taxation in
all forms is eliminated at all levels of government
4.
It shall be the duty of:
(a) Every
Nigeria citizen
(b) every
company registered under the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigerian: and
(c)
any other person or
business entity whether resident in Nigeria or not carryout any economic
activity in Nigeria
(d) To
register for taxes in Nigeria, declare its income and pay its taxes promptly
and fully to the appropriate tax authorities.
5.
For the purpose of subsection (3) and (4) of this section.
(a)
“Tax evasion” includes
the deliberate refusal to pay taxes or make tax returns with the intention of
fraudulently retaining tax revenue or concealing the actual tax status of a tax
payer.
(b)
“Tax avoidance”
includes any means by which tax liability is minimized or avoided by exploiting
the loopholes in the law.
(c)
“Tax evasion” shall be
recognized as a crime and appropriate sanctions given to offenders. While tax
avoidance shall be discourage.
(d)
“Multiple
taxation” includes the imposition of the
same or similar taxes on the same income base, transaction or person by one or
more levels of government, in one or more jurisdictions.
(e)
“person and Business
entity” includes sole proprietorship, partnerships, trust and any other form of
business composition or organization required to register for, declare and pay
taxes in Nigeria.
(f)
Nigeria
Vs United Kingdom Current Tax Policy
(g)
With the
coming of the British and their consequent colonization of Nigeria the
countries share a great similarities in their tax system. In both countries tax
are levied on personal income, companies incomes, petroleum profit, educational
outfits, value added tax, capital gain tax, stamp duties, import duties, export
duties and taxation of real estate property such as land and landed property.
(h)
The major
difference between the current tax policy adopted by the two countries in the
tiers of government involved in the administration of the tax. The United
Kingdom use two level of government i.e. the central government and the local
council while the Nigeria government inovled the three tiers of government i.e.
the local, state and federal government in the administration tax.
UNITED KINGDOM CURRENT TAX POLICY
The schedular system of taxation is the
system of how the charge to United Kingdom
corporation tax is applied. It also applied to United Kingdom income tax
before legislation was rewritten by the Tax Law Rewrite
Project.
Under the
source rule, tax is levied on a source of income or gain only if there is a
specific provision taxing that income or gain. The levies to tax on income were
original set out in Schedules to the Income Tax Act.
In the United Kingdom the source rule applies.
This means that something is taxed only if there is a specific provision
bringing it within the charge to tax. Accordingly, profits are only charged to
corporation tax if they fall within one of the following, and are not otherwise
exempted by an explicit provision of the Taxes Acts:
Income tax was levied
under 5 schedules - income not falling within those schedules was not taxed.
The schedules were:
- Schedule A (tax on income from UK land)
- Schedule B (tax on commercial occupation of land)
- Schedule C (tax on income from public securities)
- Schedule D (tax on trading income, income from professions and vocations, interest, overseas income and casual income)
- Schedule E (tax on employment income)
Later a sixth Schedule,
Schedule F (tax on UK dividend income) was added.
The Schedules under
which tax is levied have changed. Schedule B was abolished in 1988, Schedule C
in 1996 and Schedule E in 2003. For income tax purposes, the remaining
Schedules were abolished in 2005. Schedules A, D and F remain for corporation
tax purposes.
Originally taxation of
a person's income took effect regardless of who was beneficially
entitled to that income (i.e. who really got the money), but now a
person owes tax only on income to which he or she is beneficially entitled.
DEDUCE
OR SUGGEST POSSIBLE POLICIES THAT SHOULD BE REMOVED, INTRODUCED IN NIGERIA TO
CREATE AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR EFFECTIVE PROPERTY TAXATION IN NIGERIA
The following
are policies that should be introduced in Nigeria to create an enabling
environment for effective property taxation:
1.
Patriotism
and positive tax culture: There is a need to
enhance a positive tax culture. This can be done through the re-branding
efforts of the ministry of information. In most developed countries, tax
payment is considered a moral and civic responsibility thus tax avoidance is
frowned upon. This implies that our leaders should demonstrate patriotism
through leadership that is worthy of emulation by timely payment of their taxes
and discharging other civic duties
2.
Autonomy:
What Nigeria tax system need is the issued of autonomy which should be granted
to boards of internal revenue. The operation we have now as far as the federal
inland revenue services (FIRS) is concerned, is an old system. Until
independence is allowed in the system there wouldn’t be any way for the process
to be impactful.
3.
Efficient
and effective Tax Administration: What the
government has been trying to do now is to enforce the law. But cannot enforce
the law where you want to collect money and people are not aware of which law.
There is need to educate staff of some government and private organizations.
Also included on this tax education are staff off FIRS, economical and
financial crime commission and joint tax force on taxation.
4.
The
use of Computer technology: Computer technology
must be combined with the political will to enforce tax collection if it is to
yield potential for greater revenue. Technology without accompanying
enforcement procedures will not help in increasing revenue. Computer technology
can help in developing a master file system. This system assigns a unique
number to each tax payer. This unique number directly aids in identifying
assessing and collecting direct taxes.
5.
Harmonization
of taxes to reduce double / multiple taxation on a single taxpayer: There is a
need to harmonize the different taxes that are being levied by the different
tiers of government so as to reduce the negative impact on the taxpayer.
6.
Improving
our record or database to be able to track all potential taxpayers. In
Nigeria, an improvement in our tax revenue can be enhanced through a regularly
updated, comprehensive database. This would enable the country to be able to
track all potential taxpayers as well as to reduce incidence of tax avoidance.
7.
Civic
Education: Civic education was part of the
educational curriculum in the early 1960s and 1970s; however there was stopped
in the mid – 1980s and 90s. a re-introduction of this into the school
curriculum would not only improve civic responsibility but also infuse a sense
of patriotism and commitment to national ideas and interest. There should be
vigorous enlightenment and public awareness about tax payment and its
importance in the economy.
8.
Religious
Education / Responsibilities: In Nigeria, most of
the citizens are religious and faithful people. Thus, with religious provisions
that explicitly support fulfilling religious obligations, tax payment could be
enhanced. Therefore, tax education can be encouraged to be part of religious
education among the adherent. Evoking religious injunctions could elicit more
voluntary compliance and reduce tax evation and avoidance.
9.
Disclosure
and sharing of information: There is a need for
mutual cooperation among different government agencies and parastatals, this
collaboration should enhance exchange of information and reduce the incidence
of tax evasion as well as fraudulent tax practices.
10.Beneficial / Welfare schemes:
To elicit voluntary compliance, the government should be more responsible to
the welfare needs of the citizens. The Nigerian tax system can effectively
generate more revenue when the citizens have trust and confidence in the
authority. Lagos state in recent times is generating huge revenue due to the
fact that many corporate bodies and individuals feel that they can visibly feel
the development impact of their contributions.
REFERENCES
Tomiri
M.A (2001) Principle and Practice of Urban Property Taxation, Printed and
Published by Business Mirror Newspapers, Ibadan Oyo State ISBN – 978-006-069-3
February, 2001
National Tax Policy Federal ministry of finance April 2012.
Roy Bahl and Johannes Linn: Urban
Public Finance in developing Countries
( New York: Oxford University Press, 1992)
( New York: Oxford University Press, 1992)
Wikipedia
(2008). Taxation: An aspect of fiscal policy. Retrieved 22 September, 2010 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Property_tax
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