Finance Minister, Mrs Kemi Adeosun has accused some Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) of sitting on funds which they ought to have remitted to the Treasury Single Account (TSA).
She spoke yesterday on Sunrise Daily, a programme on Channels TV.
The Federal Government had since August, 2015, directed all Ministeries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to make payments into the TSA, arguing that it will promote transparency.
Mrs. Adeosun said: โAs far as I know, all the agencies are on the TSA; where there is work going on is that we have had information that some banks renamed accounts just before TSA, in other words, some banks are still sitting on our funds.
โWeโve written to the bank MDs to say, look if you suspect that some funds may belong to the Federal Government, check with the Office of the Accountant General (of the Federation).
โWe gave them a window, some returned some money but we are going out to do some verification because we suspect that some of our money is still out there but the compliance has been good,โ she said.
Mrs Adeosun said the money generated by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) does not go directly to the Federal Government but shared by the three tiers of government.
โFirstly, N2.11 trillion is not a huge amount of money. It sounds very large. In the context of what Nigeria spends, itโs nothing, in fact itโs woeful.
โAs I said, weโre tax to GDP of six per cent. Itโs nothing to celebrate. Now let me explain about FIRS. FIRS collects company taxes and VAT (Value Added Tax), that is the money shared in FAAC every month.
โSo that money is being shared within the three tiers of government-federal, state and local government. The money being shared also includes oil revenue. FAAC of this month was N550 billion so that included FIRS money, customs and oil money. Those are the three constituents.
โItโs almost like double counting when you look at FIRS on its own; so donโt think all that money is going to the Federal Government, no itโs shared amongst the three tiers of government. So itโs not that much,โ she explained.
In July, the Federal High Court in Lagos granted an interim order directing seven banks to remit the TSA funds in their custody.
The affected banks are United Bank of Africa (UBA), Skye Bank Plc, First Bank Plc, Keystone Bank Plc, Diamond Bank Plc, Sterling Bank Plc and Fidelity Bank Plc.
Skye Bank was the only deposit money bank that admitted to holding funds belonging to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).