
Audio By Carbonatix
The Commissioner of Customs Division of Ghana Revenue Authority, Colonel Kwadwo Damoah, has disclosed that government will rake in about 2.5 billion cedis this year, owing to the reduction in the benchmark value.
The expected revenue is however dependent on volumes of imports that come into the country and the impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
“If we had implemented the cut from the beginning of the year, we would expect to gain about GH¢3billion; but because we started from March, we lost out on that, so maybe, about GH¢2.5 billion; that is our expectation. That is if volumes of imports remain the same,” he said.
Government reduced the discounted duty on imports from 50 percent to 30 percent for general goods and 30 percent to 10 for vehicles, in March this year.
Speaking at a sensitisation workshop organised in collaboration with the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI), Colonel Damoah said the government is looking at a gradual withdrawal of the policy.
The meeting with AGI members was to discuss the impact of recent initiatives, including the discount values on goods and services, the GRA taxpayers’ portal, the 4 percent flat rate, and the e-levy.
With the recent reduction in the benchmark discount under the first phase of the policy’s two-phase review approach, importers had argued for the retention of the policy at the 50 percent rate in order to keep prices of imported products stable.
However, the AGI called for the total removal of the discounted duty, arguing that it has made locally produced products uncompetitive.
“The reduction was a win-win situation for everyone; but, of course, this is phase-one,” the Customs Commissioner said.
He hinted at a further review of the policy next year. “The phase-two will take off from next year, but we will have to do more engagements during the last quarter of this year to be able to come up with the exact nature of the review; whether the remaining percentages or discounts are going to be taken off completely; or just as was done in the first phase, reduced by a certain percentage.
“That, I’m not in a position to tell now; but it will be based on a directive from the Ministry of Finance and engagement with stakeholders to find the best way out for the country.”
Latest Stories
-
EOCO declares Dr Gabriel Tanko Kwamigah-Atokple a fugitive over alleged gold fraud
15 seconds -
GSE records GH¢1.09bn trade in equity market; 10 stocks register gains
15 minutes -
Fuel prices: Ghana places 15th in Africa
21 minutes -
Africa must look inward: Reframing resilience in a shifting global economy
37 minutes -
7 dead, 2 missing after boat capsizes on Volta Lake
48 minutes -
Miss Diaspora Ghana 2026 launched to deepen diaspora ties and drive development
54 minutes -
US warns citizens to reconsider Nigeria travel on safety grounds
1 hour -
Ivan Toney questions refereeing in Saudi Pro League title race after Al-Ahli draw
1 hour -
Angola appoint Aliou Cissé as new head coach
2 hours -
Virtual Security Africa showcases digital security vision at Kwahu Business Forum
2 hours -
EBID strengthens regional integration role amid global economic uncertainty
2 hours -
Two assault rifles, ammunition retrieved in Police probe of Tamale gang attack
2 hours -
EBID records strong financial growth with $722m disbursements in 2025 – President, Dr George Donkor
2 hours -
EBID to mobilise $2.69bn under new 2026–2030 growth strategy – Dr George Donkor
2 hours -
An open letter to telcos, regulators and security agencies on mobile money fraud in Ghana
2 hours