Audio By Carbonatix
A former PNDC government Secretary of Information, Joyce Rosalind Aryee, has proposed that government reconsider taxing churches in the country.
Government, in August 2018, gave the clearest indication of the government's intention to tax the churches acquiring wealth as he delivered stinging criticisms at some churches.
President Akufo-Addo speaking at a synod of the Global Evangelical church at the University of Ghana, remarked that the church is becoming a pale shadow of what it used to be generations ago.
He observed that churches have shifted from charity to prosperity and said calls for churches and their leaders to be taxed are understandable.
This government hint sparked a heated debate over whether churches should pay taxes or not.
A school of thought believes that since churches generate income from offerings and other monetary gains, they should be compelled by the state to pay taxes.
Others also argue that since churches operate as religious entities, they should not be mandated to pay taxes.
Speaking in an interview on Asaase Radio on Friday, she said although such laws on the taxing of churches are present in other countries like Britain, “they have a charities board, and there are short rules.”
Therefore, “If we want to start something like that, there should be a threshold and then monitoring.”
“So, what I am saying is that if we want to change the registration rules, or if we want to set up a charities commission, then we should do that. If we think from the perception of what is happening, maybe they shouldn’t be registered as companies limited by guarantee, then I think we should do so,” she explained.”
The former CEO of the Ghana Chamber of Mines added that “But I think we have enough opportunity actually to monitor what is happening. For example, you know I am involved in a choir, and one time we had a concert, and the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) came there because we decided to charge gate fees. So the GRA came there and monitored.”
“So, if we decide to monitor well and think certain things should be done better, I think we should do so rather than throwing our arms in despair and saying they are living flamboyantly and so on. Is there a law against flamboyance?
“How do you know the shirt the person is wearing is a gift, and some people think they should support their ministers, now if you buy a car for someone, are you going to pursue gift tax? You should be able to do all these things… If we need to tax them, then let us do so, but don’t let us use perception to judge them,” she said.
Latest Stories
-
Dumelo urges youth to embrace agriculture, entrepreneurship at VYE Forum
4 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Oduro’s stunning strike earns Hohoe United win over Asante Kotoko
9 minutes -
Samartex return to winning ways with victory over GoldStars
21 minutes -
Bolt Food Ghana vows to boost employment as regulator commends its growth
24 minutes -
NAIMOS task force arrests 7 illegal miners in raid at Kwaebibirem
27 minutes -
GIMPA Law School Dean strengthens ties with International Justice Bodies on historic visit to The Hague
41 minutes -
GREDA President pushes for swift reduction in interest rates
46 minutes -
ComUnity_Spaces celebrates grand East Legon opening and end-of-year milestone
49 minutes -
Man arrested after people sprayed with pepper spray at Heathrow
49 minutes -
Video: Mahama Ayariga demands scrapping of OSP
1 hour -
Chernobyl radiation shield ‘lost safety function’ after drone strike, UN watchdog says
1 hour -
Photos: Mahama presents 40 armoured vehicles to Ghana Police Service
2 hours -
KAIPTC marks Dr Ibn Chambas’ 75th birthday with peacebuilding symposium
2 hours -
Doha Forum 2025: Mahama champions education as a pillar of justice and peace
2 hours -
George Asah Bekoe is the legitimate family head response for alienating Asare Kofi Asona Mensah Family Lands – Court declares
2 hours
