FG unfolds new guidelines on tax holiday for investors
The
Federal Government yesterday announced the lifting of its administrative
suspension on processing pioneer status incentives applications for
prospective investors in the country.
According to the Ministry of Industry,
Trade and Investment the decision to lift the suspension followed the
conclusion of critical reforms to the incentive regime aimed at
promoting investments in the country.
The Ministry has also released new
guidelines for PSI applications as well as a revised list of industries
and products qualified for conferment with the pioneer status.
At the end of the Federal Executive
Council (FEC) meeting last week, Minister of Industry, Trade and
Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah, had hinted of the approval of the
revised list of 27 key industries to benefit from the new package.
Enelamah said FEC arrived at the new list
following the recommendation that two industries, among them mineral
oil prospecting, previously governed by the Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT),
be removed as one of the beneficiaries of the pioneer industries list
governed by the Companies Income Tax Act.
Although details of the affected
industries were being perfected by the Nigerian Investment Promotion
Council (NIPC), Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed, confirmed later
that the music industry was one of them.
At a briefing in his office on Monday,
Enalemah said the names of the other 26 industries would soon be
released to the public. Under the reviewed provisions guiding the
incentive, the Minister said all industries removed from the list of
beneficiaries would take effect within three years.
He explained that the review was
necessary to bring the list of pioneer industries and products in line
with the country’s current economic realities captured under the
National Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of the Federal
Government.
“The Federal Government is committed to
encouraging and attracting investments into critical sectors of the
economy to significantly impact development and deliver key benefits to
the country,” he said.
“These benefits include economic growth
and diversification, industrial and sectoral development, employment,
skills and technology transfer, export development and import
substitution,” he added.
Also speaking, the Executive Secretary,
NIPC, Yewande Sadiku, said the reforms by the government have further
brought clarity, predictability and process efficiency to the PSI
regime.
“We will continue with the reform process
as we plan to take the PSI application process online. We will also
engage with relevant stakeholders with a view to updating the existing
legislations,” she said.
Pioneer status is a tax holiday granted
by government to companies interested in investing in difficult sectors
of the economy with the understanding that profits from their operations
would be ploughed back to the business, to create jobs and boost the
growth of the economy.
The pioneer incentive scheme is governed
by the Industrial Development Income Tax Relief Act to allow tax
holidays to be granted industries not necessarily engaging in pioneering
activities but considered by government not mature and requiring
support to grow.
Under the current arrangement, pioneer
status grants a beneficiary company an initial five years tax holiday,
subject to additional three years on approval.
However, in September 2015, the
government had imposed an administrative suspension on further
processing of PSI applications to allow for a comprehensive review and
reform of the incentive regime.
The government has said the reform was
necessary to help increase transparency and process efficiency, better
articulate the expected economic benefits and improve its ability to
measure the impact of the incentive.
Under the new application guidelines,
information on the considerations for assessing new PSI and extension
applications would be provided online.
Besides, the guidelines further outline
the application processes and timelines as well as the obligations of
beneficiaries. The PSI grants companies making investments in qualifying
industries and products a tax holiday from the payment of company
income tax for an initial period of three years, with the possibility of
an extension for one or two additional years.
Conditions for an industry or product to
be designated with a pioneer status include if it was not being carried
on in Nigeria on a scale suitable to the economic requirements of the
country or not at all.
Either where there are favourable
prospects for further development, or if it was expedient, in the public
interest, to encourage the development and establishment of the
industry in Nigeria.
The Nigeria LNG has been one company in
the country that was granted pioneer status when it commenced business
in 1989, to enable it venture into the business of harnessing Nigeria’s
abundant natural gas resources for exports.
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