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    Africa Loses $89bn to Illicit Financial Flows Annually– Tax Experts

    Ogochukwu NdubuisiBy Ogochukwu NdubuisiMay 12, 2026Updated:May 12, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Africa Loses $89bn to Illicit Financial Flows Annually– Tax Experts
    ECOWAS Parliament in session.
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    Africa Loses $89bn to Illicit Financial Flows Annually– Tax Experts

    Experts from the West African Tax Administration Forum (WATAF) and the Tax Justice Network Africa (TJNA) say African countries lose about $ 89 billion annually to illicit financial flows (IFF).

    Speaking during an interactive session with ECOWAS parliamentarians at the ongoing 2026 First Ordinary Session in Abuja, they said the losses stemmed from harmful tax practices affecting their economies.

    The session also featured presentations on  “Operationalising ECOWAS Tax Directives for Domestic Resource Mobilisation and Regional Tax Harmonisation,” among others.

    They said the harmful tax practices included tax evasion, tax avoidance, and tax misinvoicing, among others, and added that Africa’s persistent domestic resource mobilisation gap was about 194 billion dollars annually.

    “Africa has a prevalent problem of illicit financial flows, and at least 65 per cent of these could be categorised as commercially-driven.

    “The main practices that could lead to IFFs are: tax evasion, tax avoidance, tax misinvoicing and other harmful tax practices.

    “These harmful tax practices haemorrhage the available resources that can be used for development of the continent, and Africa loses up to eighty-nine billion dollars annually,” they said, citing a 2020 report.

    According to them, advancing tax harmonisation within the ECOWAS sub-region presents a strategic opportunity for WATAF to strengthen regional integration, enhance domestic resource mobilisation, and support sustainable development.

    “Tax harmonisation is the fiscal backbone of ECOWAS integration. Without it, the region will continue to lose revenue through loopholes, smuggling, opacity, and profit shifting,” they said.

    However, they emphasised that the effectiveness of such efforts would depend on strong political commitment, effective national-level implementation, and active parliamentary oversight.

    Dr Nita Belemaobgo, Research Manager, WATAF, while highlighting the session’s expected outcomes, said the organisation’s objective was to support ECOWAS’ transition on tax directives aimed at harmonising fiscal policies across member states.

    “Regional cooperation and evidence-based tools can significantly enhance accountability and reform outcomes,” she said.

    Danicius Sengbeh, WATAF’s Manager, Communications and Information Technology, underscored the importance of setting regional tax harmonisation and domestic resource mobilisation.

    He said the ECOWAS Parliament had an indispensable role to play in the oversight function of tax administration, adding that the engagement was about “sovereignty, fairness, accountability and West Africa’s future.”

    Dr Zandile Ndebele of TJNA, in her submission, urged the regional MPs to make laws to ensure that local citizens in African countries benefited from domestic resource mobilisation and management.

    Speaking on the theme, “Addressing Tax-Related Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs) through Legislative Frameworks and Transparency,” she said:

    “It’s possible to introduce legislation for domestic beneficiation to gain more resources and revenues, apart from gaining from just taxes.”

    The experts appealed to MPs to look at the IFF issues holistically, stressing that addressing them was central to improving both domestic and regional resource mobilisation.

    Solomon Adoga of TJNA urged the parliamentarians to make enabling laws for the mining sector by “strengthening extractive legislation, scrutinising new mining agreements and monitoring tax incentives through cost-benefit analysis.”

    “It’s important that Africa protects its taxing rights. We must look at where we are losing revenue as Africans. We don’t need to be reliant on other countries outside of Africa,” he said.

    The experts further urged ECOWAS to extend harmonisation across the broader region to reduce tax distortions, limit harmful tax competition, and strengthen regional economic integration.

    According to them, the challenges of IFF can be tackled even without a single currency, noting that member states could still have different currencies and fight IFFs.

    “There must be local beneficiation in our countries. Africa has been deprived of taxing rights. Multinational companies are not paying their fair share of taxation,” they noted.

    They, therefore, tasked MPs on prioritising global tax reforms, information sharing, and tax transparency, and urged member states to emulate Nigeria, Ghana and the Ivory Coast’s vibrant advocacy for fair tax rights allocations.

    “Effective implementation of tax harmonisation would require political commitment, institutional coordination, digital modernisation, sustained regional cooperation, monitoring and evaluation by national transition committees,” WATAF’s Jonas Igwe added. Dangote, Tier-1 Banks Lead Gains as NGX Tops N160trn

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    ogochi Ndubuisi is creative content manager with interest in marketing and advertisement. Ogochi supports MarketForces Africa's clients corporate communication units with content development and liaise with media unit for disseminable product information.

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