Audio By Carbonatix
Government through the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy is seeking to intensify efforts at mobilising domestic revenues to help finance its transformative agenda.
This is also to help build back the Ghanaian economy from the ravages of the Coronavirus pandemic and the adverse effects of the geopolitical tension between Russia and Ukraine.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta revealed this during the 2023 Budget Statement and Economic Policy presentation in Parliament on Thursday, November 23.
With dwindling revenue streams attributable to a slowdown in business activities occasioned by a global recession, Ghana is behind most of its peers within the West African sub-region as far as Tax to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is concerned.
While Ghana is doing below 15 per cent, countries in the sub-region like Cote d'Ivoire and Nigeria are hovering around an average of 18 per cent.
This, Minister Ofori-Atta in his budget presentation, explained has led government to expand the tax net and implement tax-efficient measures to increase its revenue streams and shore up government finances.
One of such revenue measures he said is the introduction of a common platform for property rate administration to enhance property rate collection by all Metropolitan, Municipal and Districts Assemblies (MDAs) in the country.
He said property rates have the potential to increase revenue mobilization for MMDAs and release resources for the provision of basic infrastructure as well as the needs of the generality of Ghanaians at the local level.
Mr Ofori-Atta also indicated government plans of increasing the Value Added Tax (VAT) by two and a half percentage points.
The VAT, which was last increased in 2014, coincidentally when Ghana was under a Fund programme will now be set at 15 per cent.
“Mr Speaker, the demand for roads has become the cry of many communities in the country. Unfortunately, with the current economic difficulties and the absence of a dedicated source of funding for road construction, it is difficult to meet these demands.
"In that regard, we are proposing the implementation of new revenue measures. The major one is an increase in the VAT rate by 2.5 percentage points,” he said.
Explaining the rationale behind the increment, the Finance Minister said this would enable the country to raise resources to build the economy back to its pre-COVID-19 levels as the cost of borrowing to finance government expenditure has become increasingly expensive.
Latest Stories
-
OnlyFans ‘agents’ control and threaten creators while taking half their earnings, BBC finds
5 minutes -
Norwegian crown princess’ son found guilty of two counts of rape
18 minutes -
The World Cup and the new geography of belonging
1 hour -
World Cup 2026: The Stars that were a kick away from a semi-final 16 years ago, arrive in USA not as standard-bearers
1 hour -
Sky Train trial: $2m loss was caused by Covid-19, defence lawyers argue
1 hour -
Petrol prices set for sharpest drop in months amid falling global oil prices
1 hour -
Vehicle pollution, a leading risk factor for death in Ghana both the children and working class
2 hours -
GNFS intensifies fire prevention campaigns in Eastern Region
2 hours -
Presidency cuts political appointees by 124, but compensation bill jumps 148% and staff classifications raise questions
2 hours -
Retirees benefit from 7th health screening of Lordina Foundation
2 hours -
Sogakope residents storm ECG office over alleged overbilling, poor service delivery
2 hours -
BoG extends registration deadline for money transfer operators
2 hours -
Esiama Market to become commercial hub of Ellembelle – Kofi Buah
2 hours -
Black Stars to depart Rhode Island for Toronto today ahead of Panama clash on Wednesday
3 hours -
Wenchi 24-Hour Market project takes shape
3 hours