He criticised these tax measures for putting a further burden on impoverished Ghanaians and companies, contradicting the federal government’s earlier promise to shift from a tax-based to a production-based economic system.
This phenomenon of tax launched has raised alarm amongst entrepreneurs, economists, and policymakers, prompting a crucial examination of the components at play and the implications for the nation’s financial future.
Here are a number of the notable taxes Nana Addo launched since 2017:
- 3% VAT flat fee
- 5% enhance in VAT
- Make GETFUND & NHIL levies, taxes
- 25% enhance in company tax
- 2% Special Import Levy
- 1% COVID levy + 3% VAT = 4%
- 1% COVID levy on 2.5% NHIL levy
- 5% Fiscal Stabilisation Levy
- 5% Financial Sector cleanup (collapse banks) restoration levy
- 1% E-Levy
- 20p levy on a litre of petrol/diesel
- 10p Sanitation (Borla) Levy on a litre of petrol/diesel
- 18p levy on LPG
- 2.5% enhance in VAT
- Luxury car tax
- 50% enhance in Call Tax
- 30% enhance within the Energy Sector Levy (ESLA)
- 11% enhance in Special Petroleum Tax
- 200% enhance in BOST margin
- 40% enhance in Price Stabilization & Recovery levy
- 25% enhance in Primary Distribution margin
- 36% enhance in Unified Petroleum Price Fund
- Road Fund enhance
- 10% withholding tax on betting, lottery, and many others
- 20% enhance in tax on betting corporations
- 35% enhance in Income Tax
- 3% & 10% withholding tax on belongings & liabilities
- 25% enhance on tax on items & positive factors
- Profit earlier than tax levy on corporations
- 5% tax on corporations declaring losses
- Tax on motorcar advantages
- 1.75% tax on financial institution transfers
- 1.75% tax on remittances (borgo tax)
- 15% enhance in govt charges
- 35% enhance in company tax on mining corporations
- 22% company tax on resorts
- Excise responsibility for proudly owning a automobile, bike, and many others
- 1% stamp tax
- 35% payroll tax (PAYE)
- Customs & Excise responsibility on sachet water, bottled water, malt drinks, beers, wines, spirits, cigars, plastic merchandise, textiles, and many others.