
Audio By Carbonatix
The General Secretary of the Christian Council of Ghana, Rev. Dr. Kwabena Opuni Frimpong says the state must first tax political parties and old student associations before considering taxing tithes and collections at churches.
He accused politicians of corruption and suggested that government needs to close up loopholes within the tax net and be more responsible in protecting public funds before seeking to rope in churches to pay taxes on their tithes.
Speaking on the Wednesday's edition of Joy FM's Super Morning Show which discussed the topic whether churches should be taxed, Reverend Opuni argued that churches had been providing social amenities in deprived communities and a decision to tax them must not be taken lightly.
Pushed to state whether churches should pay taxes on tithes, Rev Opuni declined. It is a "sensitive" issue, he said.
Tithes which is an act of faith, is a donation of ten percent of one's salary to God. It is praticised by many Christians including the 19 churches under he Christian Council of Ghana (CCG), an umbrella group that unites 19 churches in Ghana. The Council has its members from Charismatic, Pentecostal, Orthodox and other churches.
But Ambassador-designate Dr. Tony Aidoo believes tithes are not gifts and should fall under taxable incomes.
He said churches "creates a moral obligation on members so it sits outside the realm of gift...psychologically, tithes have become an institutional foundation and a requirement for meaningful membership in a church".
The policy advisor referred to Archbishop Nicholas Duncan William's recent charge on President Mahama to "distribute the wealth so that the tithes will come" as evidence of how tithes are not voluntary donations.
He said there is even a gift tax on the statue books and therefore tithes given to churches should qualify to be taxed.
Latest Stories
-
From London to Accra: The UK-Ghana growth partnership in action
5 minutes -
Six dead, 34 rescued in multiple road crashes across Volta Region on Sunday
6 minutes -
NCPTA’s Deafening Silence: How parental failure, moral decay and social media excesses are turning Ghana’s schools into theatres of indiscipline
21 minutes -
Plastic pollution begins at design stage not gutters expert calls for producer responsibility
22 minutes -
Weak systems continue to hold back investment in Ghana’s plastic economy says CircularTech founder
27 minutes -
Wa East MP supports nurses, teachers with eye screening and glasses
31 minutes -
Keir Starmer says he’ll resign as Prime Minister, leader of Labour Party
31 minutes -
Child Rights International calls for ban on social media access for children under 17
31 minutes -
Kasapreko, Indigo Homes among early participants for Litina’s Made-in-Ghana World Cup Expo today
39 minutes -
McDan’s compassion fuels a new generation of entrepreneurs for Ghana and Africa
39 minutes -
Plastic pollution has spread throughout Odaw River, University of Ghana scientist warns
46 minutes -
CSOs tour reveals investing in Electrochem is an opportunity, not a risk
53 minutes -
EPA denies dismissing relatives of late Murtala Mohammed
57 minutes -
AngloGold Ashanti commissions GH¢2.8 million piggery centre to boost livelihoods in Obuasi
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, June 22, 2026
1 hour