Life Matters | Apr 22,2023
Mar 28 , 2026
By Eden Sahle
In a room filled with engaged business owners, a training designed to support compliance revealed the opposite. As trainers offered differing interpretations and struggled to address real-world scenarios, the session underscored a system where understanding the law is no longer enough to ensure predictable outcomes.
The room filled before the session even began. Business owners and accountants sat shoulder to shoulder, notebooks open, waiting for direction. The purpose sounded simple: understand how to meet tax obligations through training organised by the Ethiopian Revenue & Customs Authority (ERCA).
What unfolded was anything but simple. I attended the session with family members who deal regularly with tax reporting and payments. Like most in the room, we expected practical guidance. Tax systems are complex everywhere. The shifting regulations and uneven enforcement heighten the importance of clear communication. That is the reason such training exists.
From the start, the delivery raised concerns.
Multiple trainers rotated through presentations. Their explanations did not align. One described a rule in a specific way; another reframed it minutes later. The inconsistencies did not stay theoretical. They became obvious the moment participants began asking questions.
The questions were not abstract. They reflected everyday challenges. When different interpretations of a rule exist, which one holds during an audit? How should irregular income or earnings from multiple sources be consolidated and declared? Under what conditions can penalties be reduced or appealed, and what process governs that decision?
The answers lacked precision. Some were vague. Others contradicted earlier explanations. A few questions were sidestepped entirely.
Then came a statement that shifted the room.
One trainer, responding to repeated attempts to clarify how the law is applied, said that outcomes depend not only on the law but also on how the assigned auditor interprets it.
The implication landed heavily. Tax systems rely on predictability. Businesses plan, invest, and operate on the assumption that rules are applied consistently. If interpretation varies from one auditor to another, compliance becomes less about understanding the law and more about managing uncertainty.
The reaction was immediate. Some participants stood and left. Others stayed but showed visible frustration. A few pushed back, challenging the idea that enforcement could hinge on individual interpretation. The session lost structure. Trainers struggled to manage the discussion. The original purpose of the training began to fade.
These sessions are designed to reduce confusion. For many in that room, they achieved the opposite.
Several participants later shared a common frustration; they often leave such trainings more uncertain than when they arrived. This is not resistance to taxation. Most business owners accept their obligations. They want to comply. What they lack is clear, consistent guidance.
That gap points to a deeper issue. Training in a technical field like taxation requires more than delivering prepared material. It demands subject mastery, clarity of explanation, and the ability to respond to real-world scenarios that fall outside slides. When those elements are missing, the weaknesses become obvious.
In this session, the format followed a familiar pattern. Slides were presented. Definitions were read. Procedures were outlined. Once the discussion moved beyond the scripted content, the structure weakened. Questions that required interpretation or practical examples exposed inconsistencies.
Effective taxpayer education is widely recognised as a cornerstone of compliance. Clear guidance reduces errors, builds trust, and lowers enforcement costs. When taxpayers understand expectations, they are more likely to meet them voluntarily.
Unclear guidance creates the opposite effect. Businesses make unintended mistakes. Disputes increase. Confidence in the system weakens.
That tension was visible throughout the session.
Participants were engaged. They asked detailed questions grounded in real experience. Some described audits that led to unexpected penalties. Others spoke about difficulties interpreting filing requirements. These concerns carry real financial consequences.
Training should bridge the gap between written law and practical application. It should give taxpayers the confidence to act without hesitation. Instead, the session felt procedural. The focus appeared to be on completing the agenda rather than ensuring understanding. Complex questions remained unresolved.
This raises a straightforward question: what is the objective of these trainings?
If the goal is to distribute information, slides may suffice. If the goal is to improve compliance and support taxpayers, the approach needs to change.
That change starts with the trainers.
They need strong technical grounding and preparation for real-world questions. They need access to consistent internal guidance so that explanations align. They also need the space to acknowledge uncertainty when it exists instead of offering conflicting answers.
Consistency matters. When trainers contradict one another, credibility erodes. When participants hear that outcomes depend more on individual auditors than on the law, trust declines further.
None of this suggests that reform is simple. Tax systems are inherently complex. Even mature systems face similar challenges. Yet the starting point is clear: training must reflect the needs of those it serves.
The session offered a missed opportunity.
The room was filled with engaged individuals who wanted to understand and comply. They brought practical concerns and a willingness to learn. What they needed was clarity.
What they received fell short of that expectation.
The lesson is direct. Communication in tax administration is not optional. It determines whether policy translates into practice. Without clear and consistent guidance, even well-designed systems struggle to function effectively.
Until that gap is addressed, many business owners will continue to leave these sessions carrying the same questions they brought in, now accompanied by new uncertainties.
PUBLISHED ON
Mar 28,2026 [ VOL
26 , NO
1352]
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