The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has called for stiffer penalties for tax evaders in the country.
The President of ASUU, Victor Osodeke, made the call during a public hearing on Monitoring of Collection, Utilisation and Other Associated Services Relating to Education Tax from 2011 to 2022.
The House of Representatives Committee on Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) organised the hearing in Abuja on Tuesday.
He attributed poor funding of tertiary institutions and incessant industrial strikes to waivers granted to banks and other private institutions.
Mr Osodeke berated banks over education tax evasion and under remittances.
He commended the committee for its stance on ensuring that banks complied with its order on education tax.
The bone of contention has always been that the banks seem to be relying on a purported exemption order which clearly mentioned the company income tax exemption order 2011.
Mariam Onuoha, the committee’s chairman, summoned the heads of some commercial banks over alleged under-remittance of education tax (EDT).
She asked them to appear with their tax consultants to reconcile the EDT computation.
The chairman alleged discrepancies in the EDT remittances submitted by the banks to the FIRS over the years.
She added that what was computed by the banks’ auditors did not tally with tax consultants.
“The bone of contention has always been that the banks seem to be relying on a purported exemption order which clearly mentioned the company income tax exemption order 2011.
“We have asked the banks to produce an EDT exemption order, and they have failed to present it. We have equally presented it to them, but you cannot equate one exception with the other.
“This is because, in law, we don’t summarily assume because what is not mentioned is deemed excluded.” (NAN)