The Guardian (Nigeria)

Concern as NDIC, FIRS plan to spend N8.7bn on software deployment

- From Joseph Chibueze, Abuja

THE plan by the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n ( NDIC) and the Federal Inland Revenue Service ( FIRS) to spend a combined N8.7 billion on software alone this year has received mixed reactions from stakeholde­rs.

The N8.7 billion is captured in the government- owned enterprise­s ( GOES) budget for 2024 released by the Ministry of Budget and Economic Developmen­t.

FIRS is planning to acquire software with the sum of N3.5 billion to drive its tax reform agenda in 2024.

The amount is the secondbigg­est budget for software among GOES, the largest being that of the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n ( NDIC) at N5.2 billion.

Other GOES that plan to acquire software this year are the Nigeria Immigratio­n Service ( NIS), with a budget of N874.5 million; the National Pension Commission ( Pencom) as well as the Federal Competitio­n and Consumer Protection Commission ( FCCPC), which a proposed budget of N384 million and N255 million respective­ly.

The Executive Chairman of FIRS, Dr Zacch Adedeji, at a recent outing, said the service was undergoing a transforma­tion that will see it rely more on technology to drive its processes.

According to him, the new FIRS will rest on three pillars – people, technology and processes.

"We intend to build a more customer- centric organisati­on. That way, we can bring more people into the tax net to increase our tax collection­s without increasing tax rates.

"In our pursuit of a more efficient and contempora­ry tax administra­tion methodolog­y, we are embracing an integrated tax approach, leveraging technology at every step. This approach positions FIRS at the forefront of innovation, ensuring that we meet the evolving needs of our taxpayers in a rapidly changing world," Adedeji said.

However, there are concerns that the annual ritual of budgeting billions of naira for software upgrades by ministries, department­s and agencies ( MDAS) has become a conduit for siphoning public funds.

Reacting to the N3.5 billion budget for software by the FIRS, Professor Godwin Oyedokun of Lead City University said while it is difficult to comment on the budget, especially as the details of the project are not available, anything that will make Nigerians have seamless tax experience is welcome.

Oyedokun, who is also a council member of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria ( CITN), said if the FIRS would adopt a modern tax process, it would depend heavily on technology.

Also speaking, a former chairman of the Abuja chapter of CITN, Benjamin Ogbeide, said it was understand­able that FIRS would need to invest heavily in technology as “this is the

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