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Maintain road tolls and abolish taxes and levies on petroleum products – BASKIN AFRICA to government of Ghana

November 19, 2021
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A Policy Think Tank BASKIN AFRICA is appealing to president Akuffo-Addo’s administration to reconsider the decision to tax the poor at the expense of the road tolls. Ghana’s finance and economic minister read the 2022 budget to Parliament on November 17, 2021, in which the government of Ghana is seeking to abolish road tolls at the expense taxes on petroleum products.
In a press release signed by the Executive Secretary, Seidu Kudus Gbeadese, it states that “Baskin Africa considers this decision to abolish road tolls as insignificant since the particular levy is discriminatory and not universally applied. It’s effect is therefore restricted to the middle and upper class and not widespread to the ordinary poor masses. We propose to the government to maintain the road tolls and instead abolish the following taxes and levies on petroleum products:

(i) The price stabilization and recovery levy

(ii) The special petroleum tax

(iii) The energy sector recovery levy

(iv) The sanitation and pollution levy; and

(v) The energy debt recovery levy”

Read the press statement below.

BASKIN AFRICA’S REVIEW OF THE 2022 BUDGET: GOVERNMENT TAX POLICIES AND THE EFFECT ON THE COST OF LIVING OF THE ORDINARY GHANAIAN.

Baskin Africa has reviewed the Budget Statement and Economic Policy of the Government of Ghana for the 2022 financial year, with particular interest on the fiscal policy measures, especially, the adjustments in the threshold of some taxes, the introduction of new tax policies and the abolishment of some of the tax regimes.

In view of the new Medium-Term National Development Policy Framework-2022 to 2025, which is set to guide the medium term economic recovery and transformation of the country, the government has set out to mobilize revenues through various tax regimes. The government believes taxation is the way out of the economic quagmire Ghana finds itself hence, the proposed tax policies in the budget.

We acknowledge the impact of covid-19 on the world economy, for which governments across the world are designing response strategies to contain the impact. The government of Ghana in the 2022 budget has adopted some tax policies. Baskin Africa endeavors to analyze the relative effect of these taxes on businesses and on the cost of living of the ordinary Ghanaian.

TAX POLICIES, THEIR RELATIVE EFFECT & PROPOSED ALTERNATIVES

Paragraph 247 of the budget statement captures the following proposed taxes and levies:

  1. Restoration of the Benchmark Values of imports by suspending the 50% discount on selected General Goods and the 30% discount on vehicles. This proposal is an affirmation of the 11th November, 2021 letter of the Ghana Revenue Authority.

Baskin Africa considers this decision worrying since the selected items are largely basic commodities the poor masses patronize. The withdrawal will thus have a negative multiplier effect on the cost of living of the poor masses. The implementation of this decision could have been gradual and with prior consultations with the key stakeholders to ensure compliance. The failure to engage key stakeholders was what resulted in the rejection by the Ghana Union of Traders Association and other Unions.

  1. The imposition of an Electronic Transaction Levy (e-transaction levy) of 1.75% on the value of digital transaction.

In projecting the possible impact of this tax on digital transformation, businesses in general and the ordinary taxpayer, Baskin again considers this e-transaction levy of 1.75% as a nuisance tax which will obviously have a heavy negative impact on e-services like mobile money transactions, e-zwich transactions. The global economy is transitioning into a digital one, and so Ghana as an emerging economy should rather give incentives to businesses and individuals who promote digital transformation and electronic services and not to resort to taxing the very sector we want to grow.

Baskin Africa therefore suggest that government should find alternative ways of generating revenue rather than this easy way of taxing the overtaxed poor masses. We join the millions of Ghanaians to outrightly reject this e-transaction levy.

  1. Zero rate tolls (i.e. removal of toll charges) on all public roads.

Baskin considers this decision to abolish road tolls as insignificant since the particular levy is discriminatory and not universally applied. It’s effect is therefore restricted to the middle and upper class and not widespread to the ordinary poor masses. We propose to the government to maintain the road tolls and instead abolish the following taxes and levies on petroleum products:

(i) The price stabilization and recovery levy

(ii) The special petroleum tax

(iii) The energy sector recovery levy

(iv) The sanitation and pollution levy; and

(v) The energy debt recovery levy

If the government considers the decision to abolish or reduce the thresholds of these taxes and levies, there will be a significant reduction in the cost of goods and services, and this will definitely have an overall positive impact on the suffering masses than abolishing road tolls. Aside from this, the many women and young people who sell at these toll booths will lose their jobs, thereby adding to the numbers of the already scary unemployment situation in the country.

  1. Reduction of the 3% withholding tax on the sale of unprocessed gold by small-scale gold miners to 1.5%.

With regards to the above reduction in the threshold, the government justifies it by claiming that it (the government) lost revenues as a result of tax evasion from the small-scale miners in previous years. So, the reduction will be an incentive for the small-scale miners to pay. We find this justification weak and untenable.

In contrast, the government in the same budget proposed to intensify the Revenue Assurance and Compliance Enforcement (RACE) initiative to plug the revenue leakages. It is our understanding that this initiative would have taken care of the tax evasion by these small-scale miners. Again, this tax is discriminatory and therefore does not have a wider effect on the masses as compared to the taxes on petroleum products.

Baskin Africa wishes to propose to government to rather opt to set up gold refineries and processing plants. This will facilitate value addition to the unprocessed gold thereby creating jobs and generating more tax revenue to the government. This is an effective and sustainable way of generating revenue than taxing the unprocessed exported gold.

Judging from the above analysis of the taxes and levies and many other fiscal policies in the budget, it is our honest believe that their implementation will ultimately defeat the broader objective as captured in the government medium-term objective in paragraph 222 of the budget statement…thus-“creating opportunities for all”. The government of Ghana should therefore consider alternative ways of mobilizing revenue rather than overtaxing the impoverished taxpayer.

In pursuit of fairness for the ordinary Ghanaian who will be the ultimate bearer of the negative effect of these taxes and fiscal policies, Baskin Africa wishes to propose the following:

  1. The Parliament of Ghana should withhold the passage of the appropriation bill until the government withdraws the e-transaction levy which we believe will weaken the much touted digitization agenda of the government of Ghana, and equally worsen the plight of the ordinary taxpayer.
  2. The government should abolish the 5 taxes and levies on petroleum products as proposed above. The net effect will be a reduction in the cost of goods and services and therefore aiding production and ultimate economic growth.
  3. The Economic Management Team of the Government of Ghana should be proactive and creative in order to ensure a stable currency, so that the prices of imported goods will be stable if not reduced. Worthy to note is that Ghana is a net importer of many consumables, and so any marginal depreciation of the Ghana Cedi always have a vertical negative effect on the value chain of goods and services.
  4. The Government of Ghana should adopt practical import substitution policies rather than using taxation to discourage importation. Taxation of these imported goods will only influence overall increments of prices, especially, when there are no alternative local production of same goods to meet the growing demands of the people.
  5. The government should reverse the decision to restore the benchmark values by maintaining the 50% discount on the selected general goods and 30% on vehicles as announced by the GRA. This will ensure stability in the economy as government strives to adopt long-term import substitution policies to maximize the production of local goods and thereby growing indigenous businesses.
  6. The Parliament of Ghana should reject the decision to abolish road tolls and rather withdraw the proposed 15% increase in fees and charges across all government agencies. The effect of the latter is much felt by the poor masses than the former.

In conclusion, Baskin Africa believes that the tax policies as proposed in the 2022 budget are disincentive to the taxpayer and small and medium enterprises. If these taxes and levies are allowed to be implemented by the Government of Ghana, businesses will shrink if not collapsed totally; the idea of moving Ghana from taxation to production will be defeated; the cost of living of the ordinary Ghanaian will increase further and the already worse situation of unemployment will further widen the inequality gap.

Thank you.

-sighed-
Issifu Seidu Kudus Gbeadese
(Executive Secretary)

Contact: 0244198031.

www.padfm.com.gh / Abdulai Zulkaninu

Tags: BASKIN AFRICAPetroleum taxesRoad tolls
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