The alarm raised recently by the chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye, that Nigeria accounts for about $10 billion (over N4trillion) that Africa loses to illicit financial flows (IFTS), has underscored the urgent need to tackle the challenge. The $10 billion represents 20 percent of the estimated $50 billion loss that the continent incurred and about 30 percent of the current federal budget.

Owasanoye’s revelation is contained in the African Union (AU) Report on Illicit Financial Flows, which estimated that Africa is currently losing nearly $50 billion through profit shifting by multinational corporations, with Nigeria accounting for the lion’s share. This has also confirmed the Global Financial Integrity Group report that Nigeria accounted for $858 billion illicit cash flow between 1971 and 2009. The report had listed illicit drug courier, illegal fuel exports and oil bunkering for the large number of the loss.

IFF is a form of illegal capital flight that occurs when money is improperly earned, transferred or spent. In most cases, such funds have no trace in the record books of the country of origin and the earnings are not repatriated to the country from where they were taken.

For decades, Nigeria has topped the list of African countries on IFFs transactions. President Muhammadu Buhari had, in September 2019, disclosed that Nigeria lost an estimated $157.5 billion to illicit financial transactions between 2003 and 2012. Based on the current exchange rate, this will amount to over N48 trillion, which is more than Nigeria’s budgets from 2015 to 2020, and more than Nigeria’s debt stock put at N36 trillion.

This is a worrisome development that can harm the economy, hamper budget implementation and general development of the country, if it is not promptly checked.

At his maiden address to the 70th United Nations General Assembly in 2015, President Buhari urged World leaders to strengthen mechanisms for dismantling safe havens for proceeds of looted public funds and to return the assets to their countries of origin. That call is still relevant today. The campaign to stop illicit financial transfers has not been so effective. There is need, therefore, to strengthen good practices on asset recovery and return.

We urge the government, relevant agencies and financial institutions to concertedly check the rising cases of illicit financial flows. A report released by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) and Trust Africa Indicated that Nigeria loses between $15 billion and $18billion (about N5.5 trillion) yearly to illicit financial flows.

Over 92 percent of the crime is reportedly committed in the oil and gas sector. In another report, the Partnership for African Social and Governance Research (PASR) observed that oil-exporting countries, like Nigeria, are vulnerable to illicit financial transfers. Similarly, the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) reported that the USA accounted for 29 percent of illicit financial flows from Nigeria, Spain 22.5 percent, France 8.7 percent, Germany 7.7 percent, and Japan 8.5 percent.

Altogether, the five countries contributed 76.4 percent of total illicit financial flows from Nigeria from 1970 to 2008. The report blamed the massive illegal transfers to multinational oil firms, public office holders, the elite, smugglers of commodities and others who swindle the country through trade over-invoicing, tax evasion and trade underpricing.

Therefore, we call on the anti-graft agencies and other relevant security agencies to jointly tackle the menace.

Above all, let the regulatory authorities monitor the banks and other financial institutions against illicit money transfers. The National Assembly should also enact stricter laws against illicit financial flows.

WRITTEN BY PROF. ANTHONY EZE