Audio By Carbonatix
The Country Representative of the International Monetary Fund, Dr. Albert Touna Mama, says the present state of Ghana’s economy does not require an urgent economic programme from the Fund.
According to him, although an IMF programme is a good one for the short term, it is not a sustainable if drastic policy measures are not followed.
“We all agreed that the IMF programme may not be the path for the government now and therefore I will call on stakeholders including the government to focus attention on the reforms and policies. This is because an IMF programme may be a short term solution” he mentioned at the Economic Governance Platform on the E-Levy, organised by the Economic Governance Platform, Advocates for Christ Ghana and supported by Joy Business.
He urged stakeholders including the government to focus on policy measures that will revive the economy, rather than going to the IMF.
Speaking at the same event, a Deputy Finance Minister, Dr. John Kumah said government will be able to rake in the ¢6.9 billion projected revenue from the controversial E-Levy.
This is because all the necessary agitations by stakeholders have been addressed.
“We know that the introduction of a new tax programme will bring some attrition and we factored that to about 25%, just so we have a realistic target. If anybody tells you that the projected revenue can’t be raise, it is a lie because we know what research we have done before coming up with the projection.”
“We need this tax to be able to continue with development projects, rather than going to the market [international capital market] to borrow which will be another cost to the tax payer” he said.
Economist Professor Godfred Bokpin however challenged government to block the financial loopholes in the tax system to raise the necessary revenue rather than going ahead with the E--Levy.
“We are losing so much as a country through tax loopholes and exemptions. What I will advise the government is to look out for ways to seal the leakages and get all those informal sector into the tax net” he advised.
Professor Charles Ackah speaking on domestic revenue mobilization rejected claims that the only alternative to revive the economy is through the E-Levy.
Executive Director of Penplusbytes, Juliet Amoah expressed confidence that the suggestions made at the forum will be considered in the ongoing E-Levy debate.
The theme for the public forum was "E-Levy, IMF or what sustainable solutions to Ghana's debt crises.
Latest Stories
-
I know the President listens and he will – Franklin Cudjoe
16 minutes -
Former AG Godfred Dame demands retraction from Kwakye Ofosu over galamsey claims
17 minutes -
All Big Push contractors paid, projects on track – Roads Minister
30 minutes -
Photos: Mahama meets CSOs on accountability, anti-corruption and governance
35 minutes -
Big Push prioritises precision, quality and value – Roads Minister Agbodza
42 minutes -
Big Push agenda targets local contractor development – Agbodza
48 minutes -
Between memory and partnership: Ghana’s moral test on reparatory justice
52 minutes -
“OSP has always lacked the opportunity to speak” – Samuel Appiah-Darko
52 minutes -
Local experts unlock pension capital as Ci Gaba Fund raises GH¢380m to finance SMEs
55 minutes -
US gas price tops $4 for first time since 2022
58 minutes -
I won’t answer for bypassed transactions—Interior Minister warns security heads amid GNFS probe
59 minutes -
48-hour curfew imposed after attack on bar in Nigerian city
1 hour -
OSP has performed creditably despite constraints – Edem Senanu
1 hour -
Trump tells the UK and other countries ‘go get your own oil’ from Strait of Hormuz
1 hour -
Black Stars and the Art of Sacking: When the Coach Must Always Go First
2 hours
