Opinions

Assets declaration as a veritable anti-corruption strategy

Published by

CORRUPTION is often thought of as a problem that mostly affects developing countries, but the truth is all the nations of the world, developed and developing, are facing the problem. It is a global problem that recognises no boundaries and can be unearthed anywhere. Nations after nations are devising, deploying and sustaining legal frameworks, institutions, and capacities to prevent, detect, and prosecute corruption.  Fearing that corruption would ‘’doom the party and state’’ China’s Xi Jinpeng went hard on ‘’tigers and files’’, that is corrupt high ranking officials and petty civil servants. Lethal injection is commonly used for ‘’economic crimes’’, such as corruption, while firing squads are used for crimes such as murder. So, concerned about growing corruption across the globe, the United Nations General Assembly declared December 9 as ‘World Anti-Corruption Day’. This is aimed at raising awareness of people from every part of the world to the dangers of corruption with a call for international collaboration to tackle and defeat the menace.

Corruption is one of the biggest challenges Nigeria is battling at the moment. Transparency International, a global movement working for the eradication of corruption,  in its 2022 Corruption Perceptions Index, rated Nigeria as the 150 least corrupt nation out of 180 countries. It is that bad. This major cause of poverty has permeated through the public and private sectors as well as every level of the Nigerian society. Governance is replete with corruption scandals of unimaginable proportions. No factor in Nigeria nurtures inequality, injustice, poverty, crime, insecurity and other social vices more than corruption. Wrong decisions and weak policies are products of corruption. Through embezzlement, corruption leads to the depletion of our national wealth and undermines political, social and economic development, national prosperity, the environment, people’s health and more.

The struggles against corruption and the quest for good governance have been constant, unrelenting, and fierce at some points, though historically chequered. We have witnessed the creation of anti-corruption agencies such as Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences  Commission (ICPC) and implementation of anti-corruption policies since the inception of democratic governance in 1999. Many corrupt politicians, public office-holders, oil and bank executives had been arrested and jailed for various crimes and corrupt practices, with billions of naira and properties recovered and forfeited to government. There is a need to take effective measures to curb this most horrible national problem. Legal frameworks, institutions, and structures might not be sufficiently strong or effective enough. There is need for concerted efforts to address corruption more effectively.

From my perspective as a professional estate surveyor and valuer, assets declaration could serve as a veritable anti-corruption strategy, though not in its current form where public office-holders simply list their assets and place values on them. That, to me, is procedurally wrong. You don’t just place values on assets. It involves clearly defined processes. How do they arrive at the values placed on the assets? What are the benchmarks used in arriving at the values? For the exercise or the process to be an effective anti-corruption strategy, Code of Conduct Bureau, the government agency mandated to establish and maintain a high standard of public morality in the conduct of government business and to ensure that the actions of public officers conform to the highest standard of public morality, should ensure that assets declarations are done in active collaboration with estate surveyors and valuers who are trained and empowered by law to place value on assets. Valuation of the declared assets to verify and determine their present or current worth ought to be a mandatory prerequisite.

This is how the exercise would have meaningful impact, and failure to do this significantly undermines the process. This would help to curtail discrepancies in the assets declared and corruption through under declaration or over acquisition of assets by public officers. Code of Conduct Bureau should in addition ensure publication of assets declared and unhindered access to any person who seeks for information concerning any declared assets of public servants. Violators of the procedure should not be spared by law. By the time this is institutionalized, corruption would have been effectively crippled.

  • Abiola is an Abuja-based estate surveyor and valuer

 

READ ALSO FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE 

 

Recent Posts

How implementation of insurance policy may cut cost of airfare in Nigeria — Keyamo

There are indications that the cost of airfare in Nigeria may reduce when the newly…

9 seconds ago

Lamido and I would’ve stopped what’s happening in Nigeria today if… — Amaechi

Amaechi emphasised that they (he and Lamido) would have confronted the current administration led by…

2 minutes ago

APC organising secretary backs Gov Okpebholo’s war against cultism in Edo

He stated, "Cult clashes that have resulted in the loss of hundreds of lives and…

9 minutes ago

Why Lamido and I parted ways — Amaechi

He recounted how they both worked closely during their time as governors and shared similar…

22 minutes ago

Gov Bala fulfills promise, donates 18-seater bus to BON

This donation fulfills the promise made by the State Governor, Senator Bala Abdulkadir Mohammed, when…

24 minutes ago

VIDEO: Trump appears to decline coffee drink offered in Saudi Arabia

Footage from the event shows the U.S. president accepting a small, traditional cup from a…

30 minutes ago

Welcome

Install

This website uses cookies.