By Sunday Ani
A global movement dedicated to a return to regional government in Nigeria, Western Region Organisation (WRO), has asked the National Assembly to revert the authority to collect value added tax (VAT) exclusively to states.
The organisation, in a statement, also asked the National Assembly to amend the tax reform bills for states to collect and spend VAT in their domains.
Executive Director of the organisation, Mr. Banji Ayiloge, said such an amendment would make the tax reform bills fair and equitable in a proper federal system.
“WRO strongly believes that value-added taxes ought to be in the purview of the states, and the states need the tax to raise significant revenue to develop their areas.
“We frown at the Federal Government mopping up VAT funds from the states and redistributing them; an act that is not in sync with federalism in any fashion but unbridled state socialism, which seeks equality by creating an unequal distribution of resources that ultimately rewards visionless leaders in some states.
“This is patently unacceptable because it lacks vision and offends the principle of fairness and justice,” the group said.
Ayiloge said such an amendment and its speedy passage would undoubtedly ensure equity and justice in the nation’s tax system and enable states to use VAT to spur development in their respective domains.
According to the organisation, reverting VAT to states would be “the best political decision since the military coup of January 15, 1966, which dismantled the regional government arrangement negotiated by Nigeria’s nationalists.
“The negotiated agreement resulted in Nigeria becoming a genuine federal republic with four autonomous regions until 1966.”
Ayiloge recalled that VAT was first introduced by the Ogun State Governor, Bisi Onabanjo, during the Second Republic before the Babangida junta hijacked it and made it the Federal Government’s programme.
“Therefore, it is inconceivable that a Bola Tinubu administration that is supposed to be quite perceptive of these issues will succumb to blackmail and harassment to support a scheme that is patently illegal and deficient,” it added.
The group said it was time to correct the penchant of some leaders who usually cry foul whenever policies designed to end unfair advantages forced on the rest of the country by past leaders were corrected.
Ayiloge said there must be a change of policies “as southern Nigeria is tired of carrying the burden of others since the amalgamation of 1914.
“The propensity of other regions to focus more on intangible things to the detriment of the productive and forward-looking efforts of leaders from the South has resulted in the perilous state in which the nation has found itself.”
He urged all regions to direct their energies to productive use of the vast resources available in their respective regions.
According to him, the North’s extensive land area is favourable to mechanised farming, and if properly utilized, could serve as Nigeria’s breadbasket.