Patronage of the Ghana Revenue
Authority (GRA)’s tax-amnesty exercise, which seeks to grant a pardon to
tax defaulters who come clean, has not been encouraging, the B&FT
has been told.
The amnesty provides a limited
time opportunity for taxpayers who have defaulted in filing their tax
returns or paying their taxes to discharge their obligations, in
exchange for a pardon for liabilities that they would have incurred,
such as interest and penalties.
The GRA legislated the policy last year to improve tax-compliance and widen the tax-net.
“So far many tax defaulters have
not taken advantage of the initiative. Provisionally, the amnesty will
run for a period of one year. We are expecting to receive good
patronage, but if we don’t we may extend it,” said a senior official of
the GRA.
“We want people to voluntarily
come forward and declare their tax status. That is one objective.
Another objective is that we want to widen the tax net,” he added.
To take advantage of the amnesty,
which will expire after September 2013, a defaulting individual or
company that was not previously registered with the GRA must first
register and submit all tax returns for the years in which their taxes
have been in default.
GRA’s drive to boost tax-revenue
collections comes at a time when government has outlined new measures to
avert a fiscal explosion as expenditure continues to spiral ahead of
revenues, threatening the attainment of key budgetary targets.
The government’s budget deficit
rose by almost three-fold in 2012 to 11.8 percent of GDP, fuelled by
excessive spending on public wages and energy subsidies.
Earlier this month, Parliament
passed a fiscal stabilisation levy and additional import levies to plug
the deficit, which is forecast to narrow to 9 percent of GDP in 2013.
This year the GRA has been tasked
to collect GH¢15.6 billion for the state, with GH¢7.4 billion expected
from domestic direct tax, GH¢2.2 billion from domestic indirect tax, and
almost GH¢6 billion from customs.
Friday, August 9, 2013
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