A new report by the Ministry of Finance on Ghana’s Value Added Tax (VAT) system has shown that many businesses above the threshold of the tax do not to register.
The report, however showed that businesses below the VAT registration threshold choose to register.
According to the report, “A significant share of registered taxpayers also fail to file tax returns or file a ‘null’ return with zero sales and purchases. This is one reason why improvements in both voluntary compliance and enforcement are an important part of Ghana’s MTRS”
The report titled “A review of Ghana’s VAT system” was jointly produced by researchers from the Institute for Fiscal Studies (UK) and the Ministry of Finance.
The report analyses the design and administration of Ghana’s VAT and associated levies, as well as short and longer-run revenue trends.
“It draws on well-established VAT policy principles, practice in other countries, and both detailed tax data and qualitative intelligence on the operation of the VAT and levies in Ghana”, a statement on the website of the Ministry of Finance said. .
Below are the key findings
- That Ghana’s VAT system is progressive, with VAT making up a larger share of expenditure for richer households than poorer households, in large part reflecting exemptions for basic foodstuffs. But in cash-terms, the biggest beneficiaries of many exemptions are richer households, which is why the Government of Ghana is carefully reviewing exemptions to ensure they are as effective as possible as part of the Medium-Term Revenue Strategy (MTRS).
- Many businesses below the VAT registration threshold choose to register for VAT, but survey data suggest that there are many businesses above the threshold that should register but do not. A significant share of registered taxpayers also fail to file tax returns or file a ‘null’ return with zero sales and purchases. This is one reason why improvements in both voluntary compliance and enforcement are an important part of Ghana’s MTRS.
- The restriction of the VAT Flat Rate Scheme (VFRS) – a turnover tax scheme previously available to all wholesalers and retailers – to small taxpayers in 2023 is likely to have both boosted tax revenues and focused the benefits of reduced administration and compliance costs on those who can benefit most from this.
- The composition of economic growth in Ghana in the second half of the 2010s, led by investment and exports, was not conducive to growth in revenues from VAT – which is a consumption tax. This is likely to be a factor in why VAT revenues did not grow as fast as may have been expected given overall economic growth and increases in tax rates.
The analysis and findings of the report has already fed into tax policymaking in Ghana, and has guided plans set out in the MTRS. Further options for policy and administration reforms flowing from the report will also be considered by the Government.
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