
Growing concerns over Nigeria’s federation revenue management have intensified, with stakeholders calling for greater transparency and clarity in the structure and operation of the Federation Account.
Recent debates have been triggered by conflicting interpretations of fiscal data, particularly reports suggesting significant deductions and possible leakages from revenues meant for distribution among the three tiers of government.
The Federal Government has, however, dismissed claims of missing or diverted funds, insisting that most of the contested figures stem from statutory deductions and established fiscal procedures rather than financial mismanagement.
Officials explained that these deductions, often made before revenue distribution, are part of constitutionally backed obligations such as cost of collection, transfers, and intervention funding.
According to official data, the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) shared about N1.894 trillion in February 2026 from a gross revenue of N2.230 trillion, with portions deducted for collection costs and other statutory commitments before disbursement.
Despite these clarifications, civil society organisations and economic analysts have raised concerns about the scale and transparency of such deductions.
Some groups, including ActionAid Nigeria, have called for a forensic audit of the federation revenue system, citing findings that over 40 per cent of total revenues in recent years were absorbed by pre-distribution charges.
They argue that the current structure reduces the funds ultimately available to federal, state, and local governments, thereby constraining public service delivery and increasing reliance on borrowing.
Similarly, reports indicate that Nigeria generated about N84 trillion in federation revenue between 2023 and 2025, yet a significant portion was deducted before allocation, fuelling public scrutiny.
The World Bank has also weighed in, urging stricter enforcement of fiscal reforms, including Executive Order 9, which mandates the remittance of revenues into the Federation Account and seeks to eliminate opaque deductions.
The institution noted that while reforms have improved revenue transparency, gaps remain due to continued deductions by some government agencies outside the full implementation framework.
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Governors’ Forum has backed ongoing reforms aimed at ensuring direct remittance of revenues, describing them as critical to improving accountability and predictability in the country’s fiscal system.
Economic experts say the ongoing controversy highlights deeper structural issues within Nigeria’s fiscal federalism, particularly the disconnect between gross revenue generation and actual distributable income.
They emphasise the need for clearer reporting mechanisms, stronger oversight institutions, and full disclosure of revenue flows to rebuild public confidence.
Analysts further note that unresolved reconciliation issues—especially in the oil sector—continue to cloud the accuracy of remittances into the Federation Account, with disputes over billions of dollars still under review.
As calls for reform grow louder, stakeholders agree that improving transparency in Nigeria’s revenue system remains essential to ensuring equitable resource distribution and sustainable economic development.