• Thursday, April 18, 2024
businessday logo

BusinessDay

Nami charges professional bodies on contribution to tax development in Nigeria

Tax harmonization necessary to curb revenue leakage – FIRS

Muhammad Nami, Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) called on professional bodies in the regulation of tax practice to lead conversations on matters of tax policy and tax laws in the country.

“Our professional bodies need to speak on matters of tax policies and tax laws, especially on proposals to the annual Finance Bill,” Nami said.

This was during a meeting of the Council Members of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN), the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), and the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN) to discuss the implementation of a MoU on standardisation of tax practice in Nigeria.

Nami called for a value-based leadership approach from the councils and also urged the professional bodies to work hand-in-hand with the Service to deepen the FIRS institutional framework through qualitative reporting and effective representation of their clients.

Read also: Nigeria can leverage technology to curb crude oil loses – Expert

“We also urge you to help the Service to deepen institutional framework through quality reporting and effective representation of clients by our professional colleagues.

“We need to stem the tide in improving financial reporting to reduce the spate of ‘copy and paste’ financial reporting systems as we experience today,” he stated.

He pointed out that the tax authority had adopted renewed strategies to tackle financial reporting concerns, also noted that the FIRS had created new departments such as the Intelligence, Strategic Data Mining and Analysis Department, the Special Crimes Department, the Tax Incentives Management Department and the Emerging and Special Taxes Department, which he stated are at the forefront of unravelling financial reporting issues through data mining.

He also noted that the FIRS alongside State Inland Revenue Services are collaborating with the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) to build a databank to improve tax investigation.

Other strategies include the accreditation of tax consultants and auditors in the FIRS, the review of data from Automatic Exchange of Information as well as increased enforcement actions.

Osisioma Benjamin, President ANAN, noted that failure to cooperate amongst the three bodies would lead to chaos in tax practice regulation in the country.

“If we fail to cooperate and collaborate, we would destroy what we are trying to build,” he stated.