
Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana continues to lose significant domestic revenue due to poor tax compliance, with the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) warning that closing existing tax gaps could sharply reduce the country’s reliance on IMF support and external borrowing.
Addressing an Executive Business Dialogue organised by Markers & Partners, the Acting Commissioner of the Domestic Tax Revenue Division, Dr Martin Kobil Yamborigya, described the scale of income tax losses as troubling for an economy seeking long-term fiscal stability.
According to him, Ghana currently collects only about a third of income taxes due, leaving a compliance gap of 67 per cent.
“It is quite unfortunate that in Ghana, our income tax gap stands at 67 per cent. This means we are collecting just 33 per cent of what is due,” Dr Yamborigya disclosed.
He said the situation is similarly worrying in the Value Added Tax (VAT) regime, where the compliance gap is estimated at 61 per cent, translating into the collection of only 39 per cent of potential VAT revenue.
Dr Yamborigya stressed that meaningful tax reforms must prioritise widening the tax base, sealing compliance loopholes and minimising revenue leakages, while ensuring that the system remains efficient, transparent and predictable for businesses.
“In an evolving economy like ours, effective tax reforms should broaden the tax base, close compliance gaps and reduce leakages, while maintaining a system that businesses can trust and plan around,” he said.
He argued that improved compliance alone could significantly alter Ghana’s fiscal trajectory, reducing the need for international bailouts and excessive borrowing.
“If we are able to close the tax gap, we would not need to run to the IMF or borrow from elsewhere,” he noted, adding that many income-generating activities across the country remain outside the tax net.
“These incomes are being earned every day. The real question is whether the taxes due on them are being paid,” he said.
Dr Yamborigya reiterated that the overarching aim of current tax reforms is to bring more individuals and businesses into the formal tax system to support sustainable economic growth and fiscal independence.
Latest Stories
-
Iran and US race to find missing American crew member downed in fighter jet
31 minutes -
Gomoa Easter Carnival: Samini, Ofori Amponsah and Kwabena Kwabena rock Day 2; Obrafour and Kwaw Kese set for Day 3 showdown
43 minutes -
Kenpong intervenes as Afua Asantewaa, husband reconcile after public scrutiny
1 hour -
“Pay this, pay that, and the patient dies” – Former UGMC boss demands end to cash-and-carry in emergency care
2 hours -
Free Primary Healthcare: Gov’t floods clinics with 24,500 medical tools ahead of April 15 launch
2 hours -
Agyarko bolsters NPP chairmanship bid with Henry Quartey and Osei-Owusu as campaign leads
3 hours -
Sky-high spectacle as 2026 Kwahu Easter Paragliding Festival takes flight
3 hours -
Asiedu Nketia supports AshantiFest 2026 art initiative with GH¢50,000
3 hours -
Former UGMC boss recounts ‘up and down’ hospital nightmare resulting in niece’s death
4 hours -
Artemis II crew take ‘spectacular’ image of Earth
5 hours -
Afenyo-Markin criticises high costs stifling Ghanaian startups
5 hours -
Afenyo-Markin slams school feeding contractors for snubbing local rice farmers
5 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Galamsey taxes, sole-sourcing probes, the Black Stars and presidential dialogue post-mortem
5 hours -
Guardiola wants Rodri to stay but says unhappy stars can go
6 hours -
[Playback] Gomoa Easter Carnival: Samini, Kofi Nti, and others deliver electrifying performances
7 hours
