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Peter Obi: Nigerians Demand Full Transparency, Accountability On Nigeria-France Tax Agreement

The Presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 elections, Mr. Peter Obi, has urged the Federal Government to ensure full transparency and public accountability in its reforms of Nigeria’s tax system.

XGT

Following controversial reports of a tax cooperation Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Nigeria and France, Obi said in a statement on X (formerly Twitter) on Wednesday that while international collaboration is not inherently wrong, agreements relating to tax administration, revenue systems, and data management require a high degree of openness because of their direct impact on public trust.

The former Anambra State Governor expressed concern that an agreement of such importance appeared to have been concluded without the full details being made public or a clear explanation of its objectives, scope, and expected outcomes.

According to him, transparency is critical in matters that directly affect public revenue and institutional credibility.

Obi noted that while he was not opposed to engaging foreign expertise but stressed that such engagements must be clearly justified in great details to the people.

He said Nigerians deserve to know the specific gaps such partnerships are meant to fill and the underlying reasons why those gaps cannot be addressed locally as citizens need to be told the concrete benefits the country stands to gain from it.

Obi further argued argued that Nigeria is not short of tax expertise, pointing out that the country has a strong pool of qualified tax professionals, advisory firms, and globally recognised consultancies already operating locally. In his view, prioritising external partnerships over strengthening local capacity raises legitimate questions and undermines sustainable institutional development.

The full post reads: “Recent reports concerning a tax cooperation Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Nigeria and France have generated understandable public concern. While international collaboration is not inherently objectionable, agreements relating to tax administration, revenue systems, and data management demand a high level of openness because of their direct impact on public trust.

“It is therefore worrisome that an agreement of this significance appears to have been concluded without the full terms being made public, and without a clear effort to explain its objectives, scope, and expected outcomes to Nigerians. Transparency is essential in matters that directly affect public revenue and institutional credibility. That said, I am not opposed to engaging foreign expertise.

“However, such engagements must be clearly justified, with a transparent explanation of the specific gaps they are intended to fill, why those gaps cannot be addressed locally, and, above all, the concrete benefits to Nigerians. This is especially important because Nigeria is not lacking in tax expertise. The country has a strong pool of qualified tax professionals, advisory firms, and globally recognised consultancies already operating locally, with the capacity to support tax reform and modernisation.

“In light of this, it is reasonable for Nigerians to question why external partnerships are made a priority instead of strengthening and leveraging existing local capacity. Sustainable reform should build institutions from within. These concerns arise at a time of significant economic strain. Over 60 per cent of Nigerians live in multidimensional poverty. Youth unemployment remains widespread.

“Small and medium-scale enterprises are burdened by multiple taxes, while government borrowing continues to rise without commensurate gains in productivity. In such circumstances, policy attention should focus on simplifying the tax system, closing revenue leakages, broadening the tax base fairly, and ensuring prudent use of public resources.

“Any agreement or policy initiative that lacks transparency, public confidence, and clearly defined, measurable benefits risks further eroding trust in government. It is therefore imperative that the Federal Government publishes the full MoU, clearly explains its rationale, and outlines the mutual benefits – particularly the tangible advantages Nigeria stands to gain.

“Leadership demands openness, accountability, and commitment to the interests of the Nigerian people. Decisions of this nature must always be guided by what best serves the nation. A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO.”

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