• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Monday, August 25, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Nigeria Loses $492bn Annually To Tax Havens

by Leadership News
9 months ago
in Business
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

Multinational companies and wealthy individuals are using tax havens to underpay tax to the Nigerian government thereby leading to $492 billion losses annually, a new report by the Tax Justice Network has revealed.

Advertisement

The Tax Justice Network’s annual State of Tax Justice report measures how much tax every country loses to global tax abuse a year.

“Nigeria incurs an annual loss of $383.9 million, arising from profit and tax losses to global corporate tax abuse,” the 2024 State of Tax Justice report stated.

The report reveals that of the $492 billion in global annual tax losses, $347.6 billion arise from cross-border corporate tax abuse by multinational corporations.

It disclosed that of the $492 billion lost to global tax abuse a year, two-thirds ($347.6 billion) is lost to multinational corporations shifting profit offshore to underpay tax and the remaining third ($144.8 billion) is lost to wealthy individuals hiding their wealth offshore.

RELATED

JUST-IN: NAICOM Revokes Operational Licenses Of Niger Insurance, Standard Alliance

Delayed Guidelines Drag Insurance Recapitalisation Process

3 hours ago
Large-cap Stock Drives Local Bourse To N180bn Gains

Shareholders Get N117.86bn Half-year Dividends From 12 Listed Firms

3 hours ago
ADVERTISEMENT

The total global loss comprises the combined costs of cross-border tax abuse by multinational companies and by individuals with undeclared assets offshore.

“Nearly half the losses (43 per cent) are enabled by eight countries that are opposed to the United Nations (UN) tax convention to check tax loopholes and they include Australia, Canada, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, United Kingdom and the United States of America,” the report said.

The above eight countries which by their action are the biggest enablers of global tax abuse are also some of the biggest losers.

ADVERTISEMENT

The eight, constituting a small group of higher-income countries, account for just about 8 percent of the global population and are known to have blocked the whole world from agreeing tax rules at the United Nations which were designed to curb global tax abuse.

British Virgin Islands stands on top of the list with a score of 3,061, followed by Cayman Islands (2,891), Bermuda (2,478), Switzerland (2,279), Singapore (2,059), Hong Hong (1,948), Netherlands (1,945), British Crown Dependency, Jersey (1,756), Ireland (1 622), and Luxembourg (1,480).

The Bahamas is ranked 11th with a score of 1,313, followed by the Isle of Man (1,144), Guernsey (1 122), Cyprus (1,046), while Mauritius (the only African country listed among the tax havens) is ranked 1,005.

China is ranked 974; United Arab Emirates (UAE), 964; United Kingdom (UK) is 894, France 883 and Malta 747.

The report said the UK and its second empire is responsible for over a quarter of all countries’ tax losses (26 per cent), costing countries $129 billion a year.

It said the largest component of global tax losses continues to be cross-border corporate tax abuse, while adding that multinational companies are responsible for around a third of global economic output, half of world exports and nearly a quarter of global employment.

The report added that their tax abuse is a first-order global economic issue, depriving governments of tax revenues, increasing inequalities between and within countries, and undermining smaller and domestic businesses that generate the majority of employment.

It also stated that the most recent data (October 2024) indicated that multinational corporations are shifting $1.42 trillion worth of profit into tax havens a year, causing governments around the world to lose $348 billion annually in direct tax revenue.

The report disclosed that the eight countries which recently voted against UN tax convention terms lost $177 billion; $189 billion lost by 44 abstainers, and $123 billion lost by 110 countries voting for.

It stated that multinational corporations are shifting more profit into tax havens and underpaying more on tax, evidencing failure of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD’s) tax reform attempts.

“Offshore tax evasion by wealthy individuals dropped, but by far less than claimed, the majority of wealth offshore is still hidden from tax authorities,” the report said.


Join Our WhatsApp Channel

Nigerians can now earn US Dollars monthly by acquiring domains cheaply and reselling for profits up to $18,000 (nearly ₦30Million). Beneficiaries include professionals, entrepreneurs, civil servants and more. Click here to start.


Tags: TaxTax Havens
SendShare10174Tweet6359Share
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

States With Highest, Lowest IGR

Next Post

Reactions As GDP Grows 3.46%, Unemployment Slows To 4.3%

Leadership News

Leadership News

You May Like

JUST-IN: NAICOM Revokes Operational Licenses Of Niger Insurance, Standard Alliance
Business

Delayed Guidelines Drag Insurance Recapitalisation Process

2025/08/25
Large-cap Stock Drives Local Bourse To N180bn Gains
Business

Shareholders Get N117.86bn Half-year Dividends From 12 Listed Firms

2025/08/25
UBA Bank plc
Business

UBA Customers To Win N150m In Super Savers Promo

2025/08/25
Bureau Rate NIMASA High On Public Service Reforms
Business

NIMASA, Engineers Strengthen Collaboration For Blue Economy Growth

2025/08/25
Ojulari’s First 100 Days at NNPC Ltd: A Bold Start Anchored On Reform, Transparency, And Clean Energy
Business

After 3 Misses, NNPC Sets Nov For AKK Gas Pipeline Completion

2025/08/25
Job Losses: 483,464 Persons Withdraw N247.47bn From Pension Savings
Business

Board Inauguration Beyond Our Control, PenCom Responds To NLC

2025/08/25
Leadership Conference advertisement

LATEST

7,688 Rural Dwellers Get Akwa Ibom’s N10bn Lifeline

APC Elders’ Caucus Cautions Against Politicising Insecurity In Kwara

More Flood Victims Receive Support In Yobe As SEMA Executes Buni’s Directives

Governor Eno Faults Aides Over ‘Stipend’ Tag On N1m Monthly Pay

Lawmaker’s Wife Begins Free Medical Outreach In Ebonyi

Eze Nwandu Ascends Imo Community’s Throne

I’m In Hurry To See Nigeria Rise, Getting Close To My Departure Lounge — Obasanjo

Clerics Set To Tackle GBV In Nigeria

Annual Maulud: Buni Lauds Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi Foundation

NEMA, SEMA, Red Cross Assess IDP Camps After Bandit Attack

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.