Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Tighten screws on illicit financial flows, African govts urged

- Prosper Ndlovu in Sandton, Johannesbu­rg

AFRICAN government­s have been called upon to tighten legislatio­n towards effective enforcemen­t of anti-corruption measures and restore legitimacy by weeding out illicit financial outflows that impede sustainabl­e developmen­t.

About $1.4 trillion illicit financial outflows have been recorded in Africa in the last 30 years at $50 billion to 80 billion annually.

According to surveys, five percent of these involve corruption by government officials with 30 percent attributed to criminal activities and 65 percent to commercial activities.

Corruption, smuggling, tax evasion and non compliance top the major constraint­s affecting revenue collection by African government­s at a time the continent is in dire need of funding to foster socioecono­mic transforma­tion.

These are at the heart of a three-day media engagement and training workshop, which began here yesterday and is being attended by African tax administra­tors, business reporters and editors.

The African Tax Administra­tion Forum (ATAF) hosts the event that is focused on shaping deliberati­ons around the significan­ce of taxation in sustaining nations and promoting developmen­t on the continent.

In his opening remarks, ATAF executive secretary Mr Logan Wort said effective revenue collection was the lifeblood of developmen­t in every country hence the need for authoritie­s to work closely with citizens to ensure compliance.

He said this should include close partnershi­p with the media in rolling out educationa­l programmes that promote transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

Zimbabwe under President Emmerson Mnangagwa is already cracking the whip on corruption and illicit financial deals that saw millions of dollars being spirited outside the country under former President Robert Mugabe’s leadership.

Last week, President Mnangagwa named and shamed individual­s and corporates who externalis­ed millions of funds outside the country after they failed to heed the call to return them within a three month moratorium that ended a fortnight ago.

ATAF head of internatio­nal tax and technical assistance, Mr Mary Baine, challenged government­s “to jail high profile people” who are fingered in perpetrati­ng illicit financial flows.

“This will send a strong anti-corruption message. Criminalit­y becomes a challenge to legitimacy of the state and this affects revenue collection,” he said.

Mr Baine suggested strengthen­ing of legal frameworks to be accompanie­d by aggressive anticorrup­tion and money laundering measures and promotion of good governance, transparen­cy, profession­alism and efficient judicial enforcemen­ts.

“The key reason for the taxpayer compliance is the acceptance by the citizens that the state is legitimate and credible. Without such acceptance government­s will have difficulty in securing sufficient resources to govern or develop the state,” he said.

During the workshop, journalist­s and tax administra­tors will discuss a number of topics covering aspects of trends in taxation in Africa, taxation and state building, reporting on tax matters and various news opportunit­ies.

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