Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority Caucus in Parliament is opposed to the government's decision to suspend the implementation of the controversial Energy Sector Levies (Amendment) Act, 2025, popularly referred to as the Dumsor Levy.
The Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) has suspended the proposed levy, which was scheduled to take effect on Monday, 16 June 2025.
In a statement issued on Sunday, 15 June by the Minority Caucus in Parliament, it expressed condemnation of the decision to postpone the implementation of the levy just days before its scheduled commencement, describing it as evidence of a “chaotic and inconsistent approach to economic governance.”
It stated that “this eleventh-hour U-turn epitomises a trial-and-error strategy and reveals a disturbing lack of stakeholder engagement before the passage of the law.”
The government’s justification—citing global crude oil price volatility arising from the Israel-Iran conflict—was criticised by the Minority as hypocritical and dishonest. It was pointed out that the same administration that had lambasted the Akufo-Addo government for attributing challenges to global events was now relying on similar arguments to explain its own policy inconsistencies.
A demand has been made by the Minority for Parliament to be urgently reconvened so that the levy can be repealed altogether, with the postponement described as “wholly inadequate.”
It was asserted that “the Dumsor Levy was a terrible idea from the onset.” At a time when the citizenry is burdened by a high cost of living, the imposition of additional fuel taxes was labelled economically reckless and morally indefensible.
Claims by the government that the levy was necessary to stabilise the energy sector and address legacy debts were rejected by the Minority, who argued that a stable power supply had been maintained by the previous administration without recourse to punitive taxation.
Further warnings were issued against any attempt by the government to blame a worsening power crisis on the suspension of the levy. Operational inefficiencies at the ECG, poor metering systems, and a failure to maintain the Loss Reduction Programme introduced by the previous administration were instead cited as the root causes.
It was declared that “the notion that Ghana’s energy woes are due to the absence of this levy is categorically rejected. They are the product of poor leadership and mismanagement.”
In conclusion, the Minority Caucus reminded the government of its electoral promise to ease economic burdens, not to impose new ones. A vow was made to resist “any regressive fiscal policies that worsen the plight of citizens.”
Latest Stories
-
Not one warning issued-Prof. Aning slams gov’t over failure to warn tomato traders of Burkina Faso danger
24 minutes -
Today’s Front pages : Tuesday, February 17, 2026
35 minutes -
Ghana, Spain deepen agribusiness ties as GB Foods calls on Trade Minister, unveils 6k-acre tomato project
36 minutes -
Our Alhaji of Radio Univers is gone
44 minutes -
Eve and Twinsdntbeg to headline 10th anniversary of the Warwick Africa Summit 2026
45 minutes -
Continental Free Trade Area must benefit farmers – AfCFTA Secretary-General Wamkele Mene
1 hour -
MTN Ghana and CalBank launch 2026 “Save A Life” campaign
1 hour -
24 Hour Economy Secretariat engages Bank of Ghana on policy alignment
1 hour -
The fugu fight: A lesson in identity, a reminder of our power in unity
2 hours -
Minority Whips are the backbone of my leadership – Afenyo-Markin
2 hours -
Mahama to present historic resolution on slave trade to UN in March
2 hours -
Tanker blast: NRSA presses for safety reforms
2 hours -
Ghana, Lebanon deepen security cooperation after high-level talks in Accra
2 hours -
Mahama gov’t has made no real impact after one year in office – Afenyo-Markin
2 hours -
National Apprenticeship Programme targets 2,000 youth in Ashanti Region
2 hours
