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Overseas Profits: Companies Want Tax Relief

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Many American companies will love to move the big pot of money they make overseas back to the United States, saying they can use the money to create jobs, just as they are pushing in Congress for a tax break to do so The Tide source states.

Critics say there is a big problem with that idea: It has been tried before, and it does not work.

But as Congress continues to grapple with mounting budget deficits, and amid talk of revamping the tax system, the corporate tax holiday could get traction.

Generally, the US corporate tax rate stands at 35 per cent, the highest in the industrialised world. But companies don’t have to pay that rate on profits made outside of the United States. So lots of companies shelter profits offshore.

The tax holiday would lower the corporate tax rate to 5.25 per cent for big companies such as the bill’s proponents including Google, Oracle and Cisco if they move their overseas profits to the United States.

Proponents say the move would bring as much as $1trillion into the United States, spur big companies to create jobs and give Treasury more revenue to work with to slash mounting federal deficits.

But tax holiday opponents, including Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, are skeptical.

They say a similar holiday in 2004 didn’t spur companies to hire more or grow.

Nevertheless, last week, a bipartisan group of lawmakers filed a bill that would reduce the corporate tax rate to 5.25 per cent on offshore earnings brought back to the United States.

The measure has big guns behind it. Leading the way is a group called WIN America, which stands for Working to Invest. Now, that includes three dozen major corporations, including some in technology, energy and health care.

The US Chamber of Commerce supports it as does House Majority Leader Eric Cantor. So does Andy Stern, who used to run the Service Employees International Union.

“While fundamental tax reform will take time, repatriation is an interim step that we can take to encourage businesses to bring investment back into our country,” Cantor said in a statement.

One company in the coalition pushing for the tax holiday is the drug maker Pfizer, whose untaxed foreign profits topped $48.2bn in 2010, according to accounting expert, Jack Ciesielski.

But independent research suggests that the holiday might not do much for the economy or deficits.

The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates while tax revenue would jump by $25bn in the first few years, it would ultimately cost taxpayers $80bn over the next decade.

In a congressional hearing last week, an economic policy specialist for the Congressional Research Service, Jane Gravelle, said a similar corporate tax holiday that Congress passed in 2004 didn’t create new jobs to the economy, as intended. Instead, companies paid shareholders and hoarded money overseas anticipating another tax holiday.

“We’ve seen this movie before. After the 2004 tax holiday, corporations parked even more money offshore in anticipation of a sequel,” said a Treasury Department official. “If Congress were to offer a second stand-alone tax holiday, companies would have an even bigger incentive to keep their profits overseas in the hopes that it would become a trilogy.”

Geithner has said in testimony to Congress that he wants “comprehensive reform” that lowers corporate tax rates, broadens the base and gives incentives for people and companies to invest more in the United States.

The business community, itself, isn’t unified in support of a one-time tax holiday.

At the same hearing last week, a panel of chief financial officers said they thought a one-time tax holiday would be a mistake. The group included Edward Rapp of Caterpillar, Mark Buthman of Kimberly-Clarke, Greg Hayes of United Technologies and James Crines of Zimmer Holdings.

“Done in isolation, I don’t believe it accomplishes the goal of leveling the playing field,” Crines said in the hearing.

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Boat Mishap Kills Pastor, Wife And Church Members  In Brass Water

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A boat accident in Bayelsa state has killed a serving Pastor, Wife and other church members along Brass waterways
The sad incident happened at Odioama in Brass local government area of Bayelsa State when the Pastor, wife and  members of his church were in a programme.
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?Tide confirmed that the lifeless body of the Pastor’s wife has been found and deposited in a mortuary while the remains of her husband ,the Pastor is yet  to be recovered
as search party are still ongoing.
Although the real cause of the boat Mishap is not yet known as at the time of this report,  our Correspondent gathered  that the identities of the Pastor, wife and church members were not disclosed to the public.
The mishap, Tide gathered occurred on Friday morning when the church members were on a boat transit
The Bayelsa State government and the state police command are yet to issue official statement’s  on the sad accident
By: CHINEDU WOSU
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Rivers Workers Seek Scrapping Of Contributory Pension Scheme

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The Rivers State Council of  Nigeria Civil Service Union has called on the State Government to urgently scrap the contributory pension scheme, describing it as unfavourable to long-serving civil servants in the state.
Chairman of the union, Chukwuka Osuma, said this in an interview with newsmen in Port Harcourt,  recently.
Osuma said the current pension structure has continued to worsen post-retirement hardship for workers.
He noted that  the contributory pension scheme had failed to provide adequate retirement security for workers who had spent many years in service, especially those approaching retirement age.
According to him, civil servants who had served for more than 20 years were among the worst affected under the scheme, insisting that many retirees could no longer cope with prevailing economic realities.
He also  informed that the Union has made moves to showcase their concerns, pleading with Governor Siminalayi Fubara to abolish the pension policy and introduce a more favourable arrangement for affected workers.
“The union was not opposed to pension reforms, the contributory scheme should only apply to newly employed workers or those with fewer years in service”, he said.
Osuma explained that workers who had already spent decades in the civil service ought to remain under a more secure pension structure capable of guaranteeing stability after retirement.
The labour leader further noted that inflation and the rising cost of living had continued to erode the value of retirement savings, thereby increasing the suffering of pensioners across the country.
He also appealed to the state government to consider extending the years of service in the civil service from 35 to 40 years and the retirement age from 60 to 65 years.
Osuma argued that such adjustment had become necessary in view of present-day economic realities and changing conditions in the workplace.
The unionist also reviewed that similar policies had already been adopted in some sectors and jurisdictions, expressing optimism that the State could also implement the reforms for the benefit of workers.
He however, commended Governor Fubara for approving an N85,000 minimum wage for workers in the state, noting that the amount was above the national benchmark of N70,000.
Osuma also acknowledged the government’s efforts in the area of workers’ promotions and bonuses, but insisted that pension reforms and extension of years of service remained critical to the long-term welfare and stability of civil servants in Rivers State.
By: King Onunwor
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FG Begins South-West Tour To Promote New Cooperative Bank

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The Federal Government has launched the South-West zonal engagement and ministerial advocacy tour on the Cooperative Bank of Nigeria share capital mobilisation, sensitisation and cooperative sector digitalisation.
 Reports say the initiative was launched through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security.
According to reports, the advocacy tour, organised by the ministry’s Federal Department of Cooperatives, began on Monday in Lagos.
Speaking at the event, the Minister of State for Agriculture and Food Security and Supervising Minister of Cooperative Affairs, Dr Aliyu Abdullahi, said the initiative was part of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
Abdullahi described the exercise as a strategic effort to reposition the cooperative sector as a key driver of inclusive economic growth, financial inclusion, enterprise development, food security and national prosperity.
“Today represents a defining moment in our collective determination to reposition the cooperative sector as a major driver of inclusive economic growth, financial inclusion, enterprise development, food security and national prosperity,” he said.
The minister noted  the modern cooperative movement in Nigeria originated in the South-West following the 1934 Strickland Report, which led to the enactment of the Cooperative Societies Ordinance of 1935.
According to him, the decision to commence the sensitisation and share capital mobilisation tour in the region is symbolic, as it marks a return to the roots of cooperative development in the country.
Abdullahi said the advocacy tour was a direct outcome of resolutions reached at the 8th Regular Meeting of the National Council on Cooperative Affairs held in Abuja in March 2026.
He said the council approved the Renewed Hope Cooperative Reform and Revamp Programme, a comprehensive framework designed to strengthen the cooperative sector and align it with the administration’s goal of building a one-trillion-dollar economy.
“The reform programme focuses on seven strategic pillars, including governance reforms, cooperative financing and the establishment of the Cooperative Bank of Nigeria, digitalisation, capacity building, value chain development, inclusion of youths, women and persons with disabilities, and strategic partnerships,” he said.
He said the establishment of the Cooperative Bank of Nigeria and the digitalisation of the cooperative sector were the two major transformational initiatives under the programme.
“The Cooperative Bank of Nigeria is aimed at rebuilding a strong cooperative financial system capable of supporting cooperators, farmers, artisans, traders, SMEs, youths, women and persons with disabilities with accessible and affordable financial services,” he said.
Abdullahi emphasised that the proposed bank would be government-enabled but not government-funded.
“Government is not establishing the bank as an owner, nor will it rely on Treasury Single Account funds.
“The role of government through the FMAFS is to provide policy support, stakeholder coordination, regulatory facilitation and an enabling environment under the Renewed Hope Cooperative Reform and Revamp Programme,” he said.
Also speaking, the Lagos State Commissioner for Commerce, Cooperatives, Trade and Investment, Mrs Folashade Ambrose-Medebem, reaffirmed the state government’s commitment to cooperative sector transformation.
She described cooperatives as critical tools for promoting inclusive growth, grassroots productivity, food security, financial inclusion and community wealth creation.
Ambrose-Medebem said Lagos State would continue to support reforms and collaborate with stakeholders to ensure the successful implementation of the Renewed Hope Cooperative Reform and Revamp Programme (2025–2030).
“Together, let us build a cooperative ecosystem that is modern, transparent, digitally enabled, financially inclusive and globally competitive.
“Let us build cooperatives that not only mobilise savings, but also mobilise prosperity,” she said.
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