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FIRS Chairman Elected As 15Th President Of CATA

The Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Muhammad Nami, was on Friday elected by the 47 member countries of the Commonwealth Association of Tax Administrators (CATA) as the association’s 15th President for a three-year tenure.

A renowned tax administrator, the newly elected President of CATA brings in decades of experience in taxation and administration both in private and public sectors.

In his acceptance speech read during the virtual conference of the Forum, Nami  thanked all members of CATA for the confidence they reposed in him by electing Nigeria as President of the body, noting that it is a call to duty and that he will dutifully serve by shouldering the great responsibility that comes with the assignment.

A statement by the Special Assistant to the FIRS Executive Chairman, (Media & Communication), Johannes Oluwatobi Wojuola, quoted the newly elected CATA President as saying that the support of the members  is an honour he didn’t take lightly, adding that “I want to assure all members that I will work assiduously in delivering on the mandate of this office; and I will not disappoint you. It is a great privilege and I do not take it for granted.”

Nami, who is the former Chairman of the African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF) pointed out that due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, taxation had become the mainstay for economies globally in providing the required revenue to fund governance.

He expatiated: “Today, taxation has become the mainstay of every economy around the globe. The COVID-19 pandemic has greatly affected the earnings of most economies, especially those whose revenue sources were fetched from activities such as recreational tourism, medical tourism, minerals exploration, commodity exportation etc.

“These activities were performed minimally, and in some cases even experienced total cessation due to physical restrictions imposed by many nations during the COVID-19 lockdown. Economies across the world have had no other choice but to look inward to taxation as the most viable alternative to provide the required revenue to fund government”, Nami added.

He further noted that with the COVID-19 lockdown, digital technologies had transformed the way and manner humans interact and do business with each other and consequently brought about novel challenges for tax administrators.

According to him, “this new normal brought about a greater embrace of digital technologies that came with its own challenges for tax administrators. One of these challenges is the inadequate capacity of tax administrators to understand and track digitalised transactions which has become the order of the day.”

Despite these challenges, the FIRS boss, who served as Chairman of the African Tax Administration Forum up to November 2020, and is currently the Chairman of the Joint Tax Board(JTB) in Nigeria, promised that as President of CATA he would mobilise the member-countries and other tax bodies to build capacity of tax administrators to tackle the challenges they face.

He assured: “I will work with the CATA Secretariat to effectively collaborate with other tax bodies such as ATAF, WATAF, UN, OECD, NTO, among others, in the area of training and sharing of experience of good and innovative practices in tax administration around the globe.

“One goal I hope to achieve as your President is to work hand-in-hand with member countries to expand the character of tax administration such that our work is in tune with today’s innovation and realities.” CATA’s newly elected President added

The Commonwealth Association of Tax Administrators (CATA) was established following a decision taken at a meeting of the Commonwealth Finance Ministers held in Barbados in 1977. It had 23 founding member countries and has grown to 46 member countries today, making it one of the world’s largest bodies of tax administrators.

CATA has since its inception in 1978 focused on building and improving capacity of its members. It hosts annual technical conferences and high-level training programmes annually, while maintaining strategic partnerships with various multilateral and global tax institutions across the world.

The association has continued to play critical roles in the formulation of tax policies and procedures of its member-countries over the years.

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