It is essential to create policies that formalize informal open market institutions, enable an organized market, and improve the state’s IGR to encourage inclusive commercial involvement. This article emphasizes how important policies are for raising IGR in a state like Anambra that is driven by informal businesses.
Given the enormous advantages that free markets frequently provide, government involvement in these areas should only be done when required. One concrete type of regulation is taxation. When the time comes, it should be done often enough to rationalize, combine, and streamline revenue.
Anambra was one of the five states with the highest cash flows in Nigeria, according to the CBN. The state is a significant business hub for its bordering states, but the state government is unable to tax them.
Governments in Anambra have struggled to match the state’s rapid economic growth to its IGR. This is a result of the open market structure that runs it, which makes regulation and taxation extremely challenging. The government in Anambra has to rely on tariffs or charge them for retail and storage space. The majority of these charges are never received by the government.
The tax laws of today will have a significant influence on how this emerging Internet-based sector of e-commerce develops. The “borderless” marketplace, where location, distance, and physical plant facilities are no longer necessary components (or barriers) to business transactions, will transform trade, in contrast to previous economic, industrial, and commercial developments. This calls for immediate action to legitimize Anambra State’s unofficial business hub.
In an attempt to reach taxpayers operating as informal businesses, Anambra State recently developed an online digital company registration system, which is an uncommon move. Anambra Social Service Identity Number (ANSSID), a digital registration system, has seen enormous success. Businesses and workers in the unorganized sector are having trouble paying taxes in Anambra State, despite a rise in the number of business registrations.
The Anambra economy is mostly based on this sector, which includes waged labor, hair salons, minibusses, farmers, traders operating market stalls, private hospitals and pharmacies, etc. To completely optimize tax revenue, the gap between the number of employed individuals, registered companies, and tax-compliant individuals or companies must be bridged.
Given the economic effects of digitalization on every area of the economy, it is clearer than ever that the formal sector requires assistance to finance public spending and raise Anambra’s tax-to-GDP ratio.
The need to enumerate and tax the informal sector has become more imperative and should be made to contribute its fair share to the state’s tax revenues.