Saturday, December 13, 2025
HomeWorld NewsRewane, Oyedele oppose ASUU’s 10% training tax

Rewane, Oyedele oppose ASUU’s 10% training tax

Published on

spot_img
ASUU President, Prof Emmanuel Osodeke

ASUU President, Prof Emmanuel Osodeke

Tax consultants have faulted the Educational Workers Union of Universities’ proposed improve within the Tertiary Schooling Tax from three per cent to 10 per cent  tax. In line with them, toeing this path would harm non-public corporations which had been already overburdened with taxes.

The ASUU President, Prof Emmanuel Osedeke, just lately proposed a rise within the training tax from three to 10 per cent to fund infrastructure in Nigeria’s universities.

“In 1992 after we had a disagreement with the federal government, the federal government mentioned we must always search for different methods of getting funding. That was how TETfund got here. This time round, the federal government is saying there isn’t a cash to fund it and it’s speaking about utilizing tuition to lift cash. How will a person incomes N30,000 have the ability to afford it? Why not take 10 per cent of huge corporations and inject into the training system so that you’ve got a greater and free nation?” Osedeke had mentioned in an Come up TV interview monitored by The PUNCH.

However this has not gone down nicely with tax consultants who insist that the proposal needs to be useless on arrival.

In an Come up TV interview, Fiscal Coverage Accomplice and Africa Tax Chief, PwC, Taiwo Oyedele, disagreed with ASUU, saying there was simply a rise in training tax one 12 months in the past.

He mentioned, “And based mostly on the 2022 Finance Invoice, there’s a proposal to take it to 3 per cent from 2.5 per cent. For these of us who’re concerned in tax issues, I can inform you authoritatively that one foundation level of training tax charge is equal to 2 foundation factors of corporations earnings tax charge as a result of it’s calculated on a a lot bigger base than corporations earnings tax.”

Oyedele argued that when corporations earnings tax, expertise tax, the police tax, science and engineering tax, amongst others, had been computed, a agency would successfully be paying over 40 per cent tax.

“This is among the highest on this planet for a rustic the place you might want to entice investments. It’s even larger than the OECD. The issue that we’ve within the academic sector will not be by rising the burden on the non-public sector to fund them. The basic query is that during the last 10 years, training tax has contributed over N2tn to that sector. Who’s explaining how that cash has been spent?” he requested.

In line with the Chief Govt Officer of the Monetary Derivatives Firm, Bismark Rewane, the proposal was not proper in the meanwhile.

He mentioned, “That’s one other knee-jerk response with all due respect to ASUU. What have we achieved with the two.5 per cent Tertiary Schooling Tax? We must always have a look at how utilisation of tax proceeds has been in addition to its influence.”

On the scholars’ mortgage scheme being proposed by a presidential candidate in subsequent month’s election, Rewane mentioned it was not a viable possibility.

He mentioned, “The very first thing a lender worries about is the supply of the reimbursement of the mortgage. You’re lending college students cash to get training with out figuring out whether or not they may get jobs. I don’t assume it really works wherever. Even within the US, it’s a downside. I consider a way more viable possibility is to offer scholarships, grants and bursaries so that individuals can have training. Free, obligatory and high quality training is a proper.”

He prompt that monies saved from subsidies needs to be deployed virtually completely to funding training.

Read More

Latest articles

Africa wants to make its own games. Building them is still the hard part

If you wanted to understand the passion it truly takes to build a game in Africa, you only needed to witness the morning of MaliyoCon25, the inaugural gaming conference hosted by Maliyo Games, the game developer behind Safari City, Whot King, and Disney’s Iwájú: Rising Chef. The rain poured down heavily on Thursday morning, December

We asked 22 Nigerian tech workers what they want for Christmas. Here’s the list.

Let’s be honest: the life of a Nigerian tech worker is a grind. You’re building world-class products while juggling unreliable power, slow internet, and endless requests. When those tight deadlines hit and the lights go out, a standard gift basket just won’t cut it. After a year spent coding, scaling, and surviving, the reward needs

Day 1-1000: ‘Nigerian hospitals wouldn’t buy our software. So we started paying for their patients’ care’

Shina Arogundade spent five months living with tooth pain because his insurance wouldn’t cover the full ₦120,000 ($82.62) for extraction. That experience would eventually reshape his entire company. In April 2022, Shina Arogundade’s family lost their doctor of 17 years. By September, his father, who had battled chronic hypertension successfully under that doctor’s care, was

Digital Nomads: Aderohunmu on what African talent needs to be hired globally

Adebayo Aderohunmu’s journey from a sociology classroom in Ile-Ife, southwest Nigeria, to the talent acquisition teams of global tech companies has not been a linear path. In the last five years, his career has tracked the rapid trajectory of Africa’s most ambitious startups from Reliance Health, Moniepoint, Stitch, to LemFi.  Now, as a talent acquisition

More like this

Africa wants to make its own games. Building them is still the hard part

If you wanted to understand the passion it truly takes to build a game in Africa, you only needed to witness the morning of MaliyoCon25, the inaugural gaming conference hosted by Maliyo Games, the game developer behind Safari City, Whot King, and Disney’s Iwájú: Rising Chef. The rain poured down heavily on Thursday morning, December

We asked 22 Nigerian tech workers what they want for Christmas. Here’s the list.

Let’s be honest: the life of a Nigerian tech worker is a grind. You’re building world-class products while juggling unreliable power, slow internet, and endless requests. When those tight deadlines hit and the lights go out, a standard gift basket just won’t cut it. After a year spent coding, scaling, and surviving, the reward needs

Day 1-1000: ‘Nigerian hospitals wouldn’t buy our software. So we started paying for their patients’ care’

Shina Arogundade spent five months living with tooth pain because his insurance wouldn’t cover the full ₦120,000 ($82.62) for extraction. That experience would eventually reshape his entire company. In April 2022, Shina Arogundade’s family lost their doctor of 17 years. By September, his father, who had battled chronic hypertension successfully under that doctor’s care, was
Share via
Send this to a friend