
Audio By Carbonatix
Economist and Finance Lecturer at the University of Ghana, Prof Godfred Bokpin, has joined calls for the government to scrap the Electronic Transaction levy (e-levy) following the decision to seek an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout.
He believes the e-levy is needless once government has decided to engage the IMF.
"One of the things I'm looking forward to government doing as we engage the IMF is to suspend the e-levy. Government should take advantage of the mid-year review and suspend it. And then let's look at other compliant measures we can use to rake in a lot more money. Because the digital agenda is important," he said on the Super Morning Show on Wednesday, July 6, 2022.
Prof. Bokpin was contributing to discussions on government's decision to seek an IMF bailout and matters arising.
He also mentioned that for government to achieve the kind of economic stability it expects, it urgently needs to adopt prudent measures, including immediately passing the Exemption Bill.
Meanwhile, the Finance Ministry has disclosed that government will not terminate the 1.5% levy on electronic transactions, despite its application to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for economic assistance.
This was contained in a statement from the Ministry on Tuesday, addressing key questions regarding government’s ongoing engagement with the Fund.
Regarding the controversial levy, the Ministry explained that government will add the proceeds from the levy to the support from the IMF to salvage the economy.
Addressing the question of whether the levy will be scrapped, the Ministry said, “NO. The IMF lending to Ghana will be for balance of payments support (i.e. to shore up the international reserves).
“Government is committed to ensuring the smooth operationalisation of all taxes including the e-levy to ensure that in addition to the IMF’s resources, government can continue to support its developmental goals on its own while ensuring that tax-to-GPD ratio increases to the peer range of 16%-18%”.
It continued: “An IMF-supported programme is likely to encourage the government to investigate the factors hindering the success of the e-levy (including by providing technical assistance if needed) and come out with strategies to improve it”.
The Finance Ministry also noted that additionally, other tax measures could be considered for the medium-term.
By this information, Ghanaians will continue to pay the levy, despite the widespread public angst against the policy.
The tax initiative, which was rolled out on May 1, has however failed to generate the projected revenue for the government.
Latest Stories
-
Build Ghanaian coaches – ADC urges after Black Stars World Cup exit
42 minutes -
GTA engages Tema stakeholders on new draft regulations, GTIS, tourism levy
45 minutes -
Mason, 45, remanded over alleged defilement of two-year-old
48 minutes -
GNFS recovers body of man from flooded drain at Kpando-Gabi
52 minutes -
China-Ghana friendship built on strong historical ties, mutual trust – Ambassador
57 minutes -
Hohoe MP cuts sod for construction of bridges in constituency
1 hour -
Treasury bill rates edge up in latest BoG auction
1 hour -
Ghanaian students abroad to hold global forum on national development
1 hour -
Alcohol, drugs are not the solution to stress – doctors caution
1 hour -
TWMA urges youth to avoid drugs during Homowo celebrations
1 hour -
UBIDS School of Law among 19 schools to run one-year pre-bar course
1 hour -
Opoku-Agyemang receives update on Ghana National Research Fund
1 hour -
Mahama underscores importance of faith
2 hours -
Government allocates ¢100m annually for special needs education
2 hours -
Sri Lanka prison riots leave 26 dead and more than 100 injured
2 hours