Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta has pointed out that the 2023 Budget is anchored on a seven-point agenda aimed at restoring macro-economic stability and accelerating Ghana’s economic transformation as articulated in the Post-COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG).
These comprise an agenda to aggressively mobilize domestic revenue, streamline and rationalise expenditures, boost local productive capacity, promote and diversify exports, protect the poor and vulnerable, expand digital and climate-responsive physical infrastructure and implement structural and public sector reforms.
To achieve these, Mr. Ofori-Atta said there are three critical imperatives which are; successfully negotiating a strong International Monetary Fund programme, coordinating an equitable debt operation programme; and attracting significant green investments.
“This will enable us to generate substantial revenue, create needed fiscal space for the provision of essential public services and facilitate the implementation of the PC-PEG programme to revitalise and transform the economy”, he stressed.
“We will undertake the following actions, initiatives, and interventions under the seven-point agenda”, Mr. Ofori-Atta added.
To aggressively mobilize domestic revenue, the Finance Minister said the VAT rate has been increased by 2.5% to directly support roads and digitalization agenda, the fast-tracking of the implementation of the Unified Property Rate Platform programme in 2023 and the review of the Electronic Transaction Levy Act and more specifically, reduce the headline rate from 1.5% to one percent 1% of the transaction value as well as the removal of the daily threshold.
To boost local productive capacity, Mr. Ofori-Atta said government will among others cut the imports of public sector institutions that rely on imports either for inputs or consumption by 50% and will work with the Ghana Audit Service and the Internal Audit Agency to ensure compliance, and others.
To promote exports, he disclosed that government will among others expand productive capacity in the real sector of the economy and actively encourage the consumption of locally produced rice, poultry,
vegetable oil and fruit juices, ceramic tiles among others.
To pursue efficiency in government expenditures, he said government will among others implement the Government directives on expenditure measures.
Latest Stories
-
We want to play at the 2025 U-20 World Cup – Black Satellites coach Desmond Ofei
16 mins -
10,720 housing units under development to address housing deficit – Kojo Oppong Nkrumah
34 mins -
Study finds 2 household chemicals linked to autism and multiple sclerosis risk
36 mins -
French school head resigns over Paris veil row and death threats
41 mins -
No lives were lost during last Tuesday’s ‘dumsor’ – Tema General Hospital
51 mins -
Today’s front pages: Thursday, March 28, 2024
56 mins -
Association of Service Providers of the Angolan Oil and Gas Industry (AECIPA) Partners with Angola Oil & Gas (AOG) 2024: Members Offered Exclusive Discounts
1 hour -
GPL 2023/24: Ignore reports of imminent sacking of Prosper Ogum – Kotoko IMC
1 hour -
The Meeting with the Egyptian African Businessmen’s Association
1 hour -
Akufo-Addo accepts Oteng-Gyasi’s resignation as GRA Board Chair
2 hours -
It’s shameful we can’t mobilise resources locally to purchase cocoa – Agric Economist
6 hours -
Cocobod attributes low production of cocoa beans to bad weather
7 hours -
AGI to partner GCTU to strengthen industry-academia relationship
7 hours -
French school head resigns over Paris veil row and death threats
8 hours -
Son of Guinea-Bissau’s ex-president jailed in US for trafficking drugs to fund coup
8 hours