Tuesday, 27 October 2015
MTN smuggles billions to shell companies abroad, to evade tax in Nigeria
MTN has consistently prided itself as the foremost telephone
company that is getting Nigerians talking the most. Now the
South African firm is about to set tongues wagging with
revelations that it has routinely been shipping billions of dollars
overseas to avoid paying its fair share of tax in Nigeria.
An 11-month-long joint investigation by PREMIUM TIMES,
Finance Uncovered and amaBhugane reveals that MTN has
been running circles around Nigerian revenue authorities using a
complex but noxious tax avoidance scheme called Transfer
Pricing. For any economy, it is a slow death.
The Revelations...
The red flag was raised the moment our investigations showed
that MTN Nigeria has been making payments to two overseas
companies – MTN Dubai and MTN International in Mauritius –
both located in tax havens.
It was discovered that in 2013 for example, MTN set aside
N11.398 Billion from MTN Nigeria to pay to MTN Dubai. A
similar transfer of N11.789 Billion was made by MTN Ghana to
the same MTN Dubai, making it a total of N23.187 Billion that
was shipped to the Dubai offshore account.
In a rare disclosure in 2013, MTN admitted it made unauthorized
payments of N37.6 Billion to MTN Dubai between 2010 and
2013. The transfers were then “on-paid” to Mauritius, a shell
company with zero number of staff and which physical
presence in the capital Port Louis is nothing more than a post
office letter box. The disclosure amounted to a confession given
that MTN made the dodgy transfers without seeking approval
from the National Office for Technology Acquisition and
Promotion (NOTAP), the body mandated to oversight such
transfers.
On the basis of an earlier management fees agreement that was
technically quashed by NOTAP and on the basis of MTN’s
reported revenues, it is estimated that N90.2 Billion could have
been transferred out of Nigeria in management fees alone since
the company was founded in 2002.
Transfer Pricing
For corporate organizations determined to escape the taxman
but still cleverly staying on the right side of the law, Transfer
Pricing is the new cellar door constructed by the most ingenious
of accountants. It is a new global disease to which Third World
economies are the most vulnerable.
Multinationals employ Transfer Pricing to move their profits
offshore, leaving behind a shrinking tax base in their host
countries and inexorable cuts to public services.
In Africa, tax avoidance has been named as one of the factors
holding the continent back by starving governments of the
revenues it needs for development.
A report jointly commissioned by the United Nations and the
African Union and drafted by a high level panel led by former
South African president Thabo Mbeki considered tax avoidance
by multinationals to be an “illicit financial flow” and a significant
drain on government resources across the continent.
In total illicit financial flows, which included corruption and the
proceeds of crime, were determined to be costing the continent
$50 Billion a year $50bn.
Just last year, South Africa’s deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa
had harsh words for tax dodgers. He said: “Tax evasion is not
only a crime against the state; it’s also a crime against the
people of our country, ordinary people.”
Curiously, the same Cyril Rhamaposa was non-executive
chairman of the board of MTN between 2001 and 2013 before
he became South Africa’s No.2 man. In effect, the same tax
practices which the deputy president strongly condemned in his
country as financial crime is vigorously being promoted in
Nigeria.
MTN is the largest cell phone company in Africa with 227.5
million subscribers. The company, which operates in more than
20 countries across Africa and the Middle East, has Nigeria as
its biggest operation.
Until now, tax justice investigations had focused on computer
giants, corporations in the extractive industry, food and
beverages; in fact everywhere but the mobile phone sector
despite the cell phone industry in Africa being one of the largest
and most important industries for the continent.
Mobile phone has been a cheap and quick way of rolling out the
vital communications infrastructure that has underpinned
Africa’s growth story over the last decade. As a result the
industry has seen explosive growth. With 685million mobile
phone users in Africa, the success story means that cell phone
companies are now the largest contributor to government
revenues in many African countries. That is when they pay their
fair share of taxes.
Artificial operating costs
To pay little or no tax, companies determined to cheat begin by
seeking ways to create artificial operating costs in the country
where they operate. For example, a company is in Nigeria but
has a parent or subsidiary company in another country. It
makes huge profit but decides to declare a much lower profit-
before-tax. To achieve this, it pays the parent and/ or subsidiary
company for services not rendered and ships cash to them.
Where services are rendered, the costs are inflated. Such
services may include royalty for the use of brand name,
procurement services, technical services and management
services.
Typically, the recipient company is located in an offshore
territory under a different financial jurisdiction. MTN has a
substantial network of subsidiaries in offshore tax havens,
including the British Virgin Islands, Dubai and Mauritius.
Because of the growing concerns that multinationals are using
intra-company trading to shift profits around the world by
overcharging for services delivered or in more extreme cases by
creating artificial transactions where no services was rendered
at all, respective countries have a maximum percentage of
profits it can allow companies to pay out as management fees.
For example, in Senegal, accounts from the company Sonatel
show that the company has a ‘cooperation agreement’ with
parent company France Telecom that is capped at 1.43% of
revenue.
Until 2010 MTN Nigeria had an agreement with MTN Dubai to
pay 1.75% of revenues to the company for management, and
royalties for the use of the MTN trademark. Nigeria requires
that management fees paid by multinationals are approved by
the National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion
(NOTAP). The fee payments had been reversed following a
failure to come to a new agreement on management fees with
Nigerian regulators.
MTN’s previous agreement with NOTAP expired in 2010.
Notwithstanding, MTN has continued to make payments
overseas. When we sent questions to MTN over these
unauthorized payments, the company told us that this was
because they expected NOTAP to approve a new deal and
backdate it to the date of the expiry of the previous deal.
MTN’s financial activities are now being questioned by more
than one tax authorizes in Africa.
In Ghana the MTN subsidiary, Scancom, has been paying vast
management fees to companies located offshore. Our
investigations reveal that Scancom paid 758m GHS in
management and technical fees to MTN Dubai between 2008
and 2013. This was 9.64% of the company’s revenue. Normally
the maximum fee level allowed in Ghana is 6%.
We can reveal that the high levels of fees attracted the attention
of Ghana’s intelligence services, which launched an
investigation into “economic fraud” between 2012 and 2013.
MTN’s management fees need approval from the Ghana
Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC). The Ghanaian “National
Security Taskforce” has called for a “review of all technology
transfer and management service agreements currently held by
GIPC to remove sections which are inapplicable and wrongly
provided for” and upgrading and training of state systems and
staff.
In response to this, MTN in Ghana told us: “The technical and
management services agreements between Scancom and
Investcom were duly approved by the GIPC.”
The current head of the GIPC is Mrs. Mawuena Trebarh, who
between 2007 and 2012 was responsible for government
relations at MTN Ghana. This reporting team asked Mrs Trebarh
to comment on whether her previous role could be perceived a
conflict of interest. She did not respond to our requests.
In response to our enquiries MTN confirmed that the company
paid 12 billion West African Francs in 2012 and 14 billion West
African Francs in 2013 in management fees to MTN
International. The figure for 2013 is equivalent to 5% of the
revenue made by MTN in Cote d’Ivoire.
Dubai paradox
Dubai is one of the places MTN ships huge profits to.
Meanwhile, MTN does not operate any mobile phones in Dubai,
yet it has significant operations in the small city state.
MTN told us that it employs around 115 people in Dubai who
provides services to the MTN group such as group procurement,
group finance, legal services, human resources and other
corporate functions.
One tool that campaigners have said will be helpful is to look at
company reporting on a country by country basis. If a company
is making huge revenues in a country where it has few
employees but there is a low tax rate, which would suggest that
there may be some profit shifting taking place.
In Uganda, a dispute between the Uganda Revenue Authority
and MTN has revealed that the company is paying 3% of its
turnover in management fees to MTN International.
The fees have been challenged by the Uganda Revenue
Authority (URA) who issued MTN with a “notice of assessment”
in 2011. This was for a number of tax issues between 2003 and
2009, but a large portion was to do with a dispute over
management fees, most of which had been paid to Mauritius.
Correspondence between the URA and MTN seen by us show
that the URA questioned the legitimacy of these fees, and
pointed out that MTNI, the company providing “management
services” to MTN Uganda had not spent any money in the years
they had looked into. The URA said this could only mean two
things: that management services provided to MTN Uganda had
either already been paid for by MTN Uganda (and so MTN was
in effect charging twice for the same thing) or they were never
provided at all.
The Ugandan authority told the company: “We have repeatedly
asked for evidence of specific work performed by MTN Group
for MTN Uganda for each of the tax years 2003 to 2009. We
have only been provided with very little information relating to
2009 and the latter years. This information is very far from
justifying a payment of 3 per cent of MTN Uganda’s turnover as
management fees.”
NOTAP keeps mum
Asked to confirm the amount of fees paid out to MTN Dubai and
Mauritius based on the company’s reported revenue between
2002 and today, MTN told PREMIUM TIMES: “There is no
disclosure obligation for this information in South Africa or
Nigeria.”
Asked to explain the possible justification for MTN Nigeria to
pay fees for management and technical services to a company
with no employees, MTN said: “It is the contracting party’s
prerogative as to how it elects to discharge its contractual
obligations.”
Meaning is that MTN Mauritius can perform its task without a
single staff member.
PREMIUM TIMES made sustained efforts to get NOTAP and the
Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) to comment on the MTN
practices in Nigeria.
The Director in charge of Technology Transfer and Agreement,
Ephraim Okejiri, initially pleaded that he was in a meeting, and
that the reporter should wait.
But after over four hours of waiting, he sent a secretary to say
he would not be able to give any information on MTN.
Similarly at Nigeria’s tax agency, the Federal Inland Revenue
Service, the Director of Public Communications, Emmanuel
Obeta, who had earlier promised on three occasion to make
information available on the matter suddenly had a change of
mind.
He said relevant officials who should provide him with the
information sought were all not available.
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