...after
windfall tax resurfaces in budget
Any attempt by government to introduce a
windfall profit tax on mining companies will further discourage investment in
the industry, Dr. Toni Aubynn, CEO of Ghana Chamber of Mines, has said.
Already, with the persistent drops in
gold price, mining companies are struggling to keep the cap on rising cost of
operations.
The warning comes after Seth Terkper,
the Finance Minister, said that government has not backed down on the windfall
profit tax bill first introduced to Parliament last year, but withdrawn for
further consultations with the industry and regulators.
“A committee is reviewing all stability
agreements, incentives, and the windfall profit tax that could not be passed in
2012. In due course, government will re-introduce the bill in Parliament after
completion of the consultations with all stakeholders. I will urge all civil
society interest groups to continue with the submission of their
recommendations on how to adequately tax the mining industry,” the Minister
told MPs.
Dr.
Aubynn told B&FT that the tax would be inimical to future mining
investments and the long-term sustainability of the industry.
“We were
surprised that the Finance Minister even mentioned it in the budget at this time;
maybe there must be some good reason for reintroduction of the tax,” he said.
“If
government introduces a windfall profit tax when gold prices are rising, will
government also provide subsidies to the industry when prices fall?” he
queried.
Dr.
Aubynn said miners will find it difficult to accommodate yet another tax as the
price of gold continues to drop. The metal has lost 25 percent of its value
this year, and this came on the back of an increase in the mining sector’s corporate
tax rate from 25 percent to 35 percent.
Efforts
to boost the tax-take from the extractives sector are informed by a
“super-decade” of mining -- in which prices quintupled - and common sentiment
that the sector has not provided sufficient benefits to government and
communities, with civil-society bodies and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) supporting additional taxes for the industry.
But after more than a decade of record
prices, the gold price bubble has been bursting in 2013, hitting miners hard
and causing a rethink of investment plans for the industry. In a bid to tighten
their belts, companies have announced job-cuts.
He also cautioned
government to be careful with its decision to embark on stakeholder
consultation on matters involving mining taxes, “because persons who do not
understand the industry may have their way.
“It
should be technically considered because not everybody understands mining, and
not everybody understands taxes. If you technically consider the issue, you
look at the technical intricacies and listen to what the experts from both
sides are saying before you come to a compromise,” he said.
Falling
prices have been further worsened by rising costs according to the CEO, as gold
miners are currently producing at a cash cost of US$962 per ounce -- up 25%
from US$768 per ounce in the first half of 2012.
This
situation has led to the discontinuation of some exploration and brownfield
projects, and rationalisation of inputs including labour.
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