
Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana National Chamber of Pharmacy (GNCoP) has urged the government to reconsider its decision to remove the benchmark value on pharmaceutical products.
In a press release signed by the Chief Executive Officer, Anthony Ameka, the chamber said the removal of the benchmark value on pharmaceutical products will lead to an increase in prices of medical supplies and medicines.
This, GNCoP explained, will result in a rippling effect of high-cost of healthcare delivery.
“The local manufacturing sector provides 30% of the medicine needs in the country with 70% of medicines imported. The removal of the benchmark on the pharmaceutical products will lead to the increase of prices of medicines and other medical supplies.
The impact will result in the high-cost of healthcare delivery with its attendant cost implications on the NHIS medicines bill,” the statement noted.
The statement added that, “the state loses on the removal of benchmark and the increase of final retail price it pays for medicines under the NHIA. Currently, the state is benefitting from the benchmarking policy and as a result is able to pay health facilities through NHIA. This situation turns out to improve the cash cycle of the private sector (importers) to integrate backward faster and expand their operation, resulting in job creation for the State.”
On Monday, November 15, the removal of the 50% Benchmark Values on 32 categories of items at the ports took effect.
The Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) in a letter forwarded to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta, signed by the Commissioner-General, Rev. Ammishaddai Owusu-Amoah, revealed that the move is informed by an agreement reached with the business community to, as it were, generate more revenue.
This means that all items under the 32 categories currently enjoying port clearing discounts, will no longer enjoy that special dispensation.
Meanwhile, the Ghana Union of Traders Association had cautioned the government against the removal of the 50% Benchmark Value policy at the ports.
The union described the removal as “suicidal” to Ghanaian businesses.
Latest Stories
-
Several Ghana-bound vegetable trucks detained in Nigeria
40 minutes -
Black Sherif questions Wendy Shay’s absence in “Artiste of the Year” talks ahead of TGMA 2026
2 hours -
Government confirms arrival of 100 new buses to ease transport challenges
2 hours -
$600m tomato imports undermining Ghana’s economy — Chamber of Agribusiness
3 hours -
Rainstorm wreaks havoc: Faulty transformers, feeder failures leave parts of 3 regions without power
4 hours -
CUTS International calls for urgent competition law amid sachet water price hikes
4 hours -
‘I never did this advert’, AI clones hijack Ghanaian identities for profit
5 hours -
25-year-old woman battles trauma after surviving deadly Nkwanta attack
5 hours -
Vice President honoured at Tortsogbeza as South Tongu leaders highlight development needs
5 hours -
Kwahu Business Forum 2026: Corporate citizenship, sustaining African businesses take centre stage with KGL as the case study
6 hours -
Trump seeks $152m to reopen notorious Alcatraz prison
8 hours -
Ex-Chelsea player Oscar retires with heart issue
9 hours -
CA Foundation drives constitutional literacy in Kpone Katamanso municipality
9 hours -
GPRTU to hold talks with Transport Ministry over rising fuel costs
9 hours -
CUTS International urges gov’t to halt sachet water price hike pending cost review
9 hours