“It’s a great time to invest in Ghana–the safest country in West Africa”– Akufo-Addo

0

The President of the Republic, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has told members of the black business community in the United States of America of the numerous investment opportunities existing in Ghana, as the country seeks to build back strongly from the ravages of COVID-19. 

Delivering the keynote address at the “Africa Flagship Programme” session of the 45th Annual Legislative Conference of the National Black Caucus of State Legislators, being held in Atlanta, Georgia, on Wednesday, 1st December 2021, President Akufo-Addo stated that “it is a great time to invest in Ghana, for the opportunities are bright”. 

According to the President, despite the very real difficulties posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, Ghana is doing some things right, and sending out the right signals to the global investor community. 

“Last year, 2020, Ghana recorded FDI of US$2.65 billion from two hundred and seventy-nine (279) projects. For 2021 alone, the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) recorded FDI of nine hundred and seventy-three million dollars (US$973.38 million), from one hundred and seventy-three (173) projects for the first three quarters of the year, with large ticket projects in the pipeline to boost FDI flows by the close of year” he said. 

Ghana, Akufo-Addo stated in his address, was among the first countries, anywhere in the world, to put together a medium-term response strategy to address the impact of COVID-19 on the economy, and to outline an economic recovery, revitalisation, and transformation plan to build back better and stronger. 

“We have identified the relevant sectors of the economy requiring the needed investment that will help accelerate the rebound and growth of the Ghanaian economy, as was witnessed in the immediate years before the pandemic struck, which saw, between 2017 and 2020, our average annual GDP growth rate of seven percent (7%) as one of the fastest in the world. We call the recovery package the Ghana CARES ‘Obaatampa’ Programme,” he said. 

President Akufo-Addo told the gathering that the GH¢100 billion Programme, aimed at stabilising and revitalising the Ghanaian economy, has two phases, the Stabilisation Phase, which was implemented between July to December 2020; and the Revitalization and Transformation Stage which is currently under implementation, and will end in 2023. 

Read Also: Dumsor has destroyed all my appliances- Otumfour tells Napo

“We are focusing our energies on supporting commercial farming, and attracting educated youths into agriculture, building Ghana’s light manufacturing sector, fast-tracking efforts at digitisation, developing Ghana’s housing and construction industry, establishing Ghana as a Regional Hub, and strengthening the enablers of growth of our economy,” he said. 

Akufo-Addo continued, “However, the most attractive and the greatest selling point of Ghana is and has always been her people, the Ghanaian people. The welcome that you find in Ghana, with all due respect to you at this gathering, is unique, and like none anywhere else.” 

With Akufo-Addo reassuring the investor community that Ghana remains a safe country, he reiterated his position that “Ghana is the safest country in West Africa. Our police and security agencies work hard to keep Ghana an open and happy place, where we are not embarrassed to see ourselves as each other’s keeper.” 

He, thus, to the investor community that they can choose to invest in Ghana through the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre or set up as a Free Zones enterprise, stressing that his government has instituted a number of fiscal incentives for the investor depending on the nature of the activity or the location of the investment. 

Touting Ghana’s democratic credentials, which has seen the country conducting 8 presidential elections in the twenty-eight (28) year period of the 4th Republic, the President indicated that investors are optimistic about the Ghanaian economy. 

“We have done the heavy lifting required to transition our economy into a growth economy, and are now establishing sustainability and irreversibility. We are spearheading regional integration and cooperation in industrialising Africa, and currently hosting the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which comprises fifty-four (54) states, with a combined GDP of three trillion United States dollars (US$3 trillion),” he said. 

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Let’s prioritise sanitation in SHSs-Regional Coordinator

0




The Volta Regional Coordinator of Senior High Schools (SHSs), Mrs Doris Abayavor, has appealed to all stakeholders in the education sector to prioritise sanitation issues in the various SHSs to help improve students’ health and academic performance.

The introduction of the free SHS education programme has doubled the total intake of students which has overstretched facilities with concerns for improved sanitary measures to help avert communicable diseases.

Speaking in an Interview with DAILY Analyst during a sanitation sensitisation programme being organised by Zoomlion Ghana Limited and the Ghana Education Service at Vakpo Senior High School, Mrs Abayavor stated that “per the population we have in the schools almost everything is overstretched and sanitation issues should be prioritised to help avert the spread of diseases.”

She said “Sanitation should start with the personality involved up to the community at large and students should start with their personal hygiene which will help improve their health and academic performance.”

Mrs Abayavor expressed gratitude to Zoomlion Ghana Limited for the partnership with the Ghana Education Service to help undertake sanitation awareness programmes in Senior High Schools, and appealed to other private institutions to support schools in need of improved sanitation facilities.

The Schools Health Education Programme (SHEP) Coordinator of the Volta Region, Mr. Constant Kofi Dzakpasu, took the students through personal hygiene tips such as handwashing, cleaning one’s immediate environment among others and tasked them to practise personal hygiene at all times.

He said “Effective behaviour change programme are critical to the success and sustainability of all water, sanitation and hygiene interventions. Schools must practise handwashing with soap, safe handling of drinking water, safe excreta disposal, environmental sanitation and personal hygiene including menstrual hygiene.”

A Senior Communications Officer of Zoomlion Ghana Limited, Mr Adams Mohammed Mahama, explained that proper solid waste management practices by stating that “Solid waste management starts with the individual in that when you put your solid waste in a wastebin, it becomes easier to collect and send them to recycling facilities established by Zoomlion to recycle them into re-useable products.”

He charged the students to be good agents of sanitation practices in their communities to help make Ghana a clean nation.

The Assistant Headmaster of Vakpo SHS expressed the school’s appreciation to Zoomlion Ghana Limited and GES for the education and support to help manage solid waste within the campus.

The team donated waste bins to the school to help store solid waste for safe collection.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Covid: South Africa new cases double in 24 hours as Omicron spreads

0

Health officials say the new coronavirus variant Omicron has now become dominant in South Africa and is driving a sharp increase in new infections.

Some 8,500 new Covid infections were registered in the latest daily figures.

That is almost double the 4,300 cases confirmed the previous day.

Omicron has now been detected in at least 24 countries around the world, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

Read Also: Chaos in Parliament over budget approval (Video)

South Africa was the first country to detect the highly mutated new variant. Its National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) has said more than 70% of all the virus genomes it sequenced last month have been of the new variant.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are among the latest countries to have confirmed their first cases of Omicron. Others including the UK, US and Germany have also seen people infected by the new variant.

Many questions about Omicron remain to be answered, including how much protection current vaccines provide.

The WHO has categorised it as a “variant of concern”, and says early evidence suggests it has a higher re-infection risk.

Earlier this week, countries around the world restricted travel from southern Africa as details of the spread emerged.

This prompted South Africa’s foreign ministry to complain that it was being punished – instead of applauded – for discovering Omicron.

South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa also said he was “deeply disappointed” by the travel bans, which he described as being unjustified.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus later warned that blanket Covid measures were penalising southern Africa.

New infections are expected to increase in what is now the beginning of the fourth wave in South Africa, and the national health department says there has also been a slight increase in hospital admissions.

Most of the people who have been hospitalised in South Africa had not been vaccinated against coronavirus, according to the NICD.

There are no vaccine shortages in the country, and Mr Ramaphosa has urged more people to get jabbed, saying this remains the best way to fight the virus.

Source: BBC

Dumsor has destroyed all my appliances- Otumfour tells Napo

The King of the Asante Kingdom, Otumfour Osei Tutu II has revealed to Minister for Energy, Mathew Opoku Prempeh, that the  recent power outages in Kumasi have destroyed all his electrical appliances.

Over the past days, the Ashanti Region has been hit hardly by power outages most in the evening mostly from 6pm until 11 pm.


Due to this, Mathew Opoku Prempeh (NAPO) visited some power generation sub-stations of GRIDCo and the ECG at Anwomaso, and other places to help find solution to the problem.

He  assured people in the region of an immediate solution latest by December 20 this year.

Speaking to the Energy Minister, Mathew Opoku when he  (EnergyMinister) paid a courtesy call on him, Asantehene Otumfour Osei Tutu II bemoaned the intermittent power outages.

Read Also: Mahama observes elections in Gambia

He noted that barely three months ago the light system was good in the region but recently the power outages have intensified affecting the lives and works of people in the region.

“Dr. Mathew Opoku Prempeh came to my palace and  when he asked permission to eat outside the light went off  just Infront of his friends” he revealed

Otumfuor asked the Minister to expedite action and locate the plant to support the region with stable power.

Hon. Mathew Opoku Prempeh, on his part, assured the Asantehene of an immediate solution to the problem.

He also cautioned people who have built their structures, buildings and others under ECG high tension powerlines and said the ministry will soon demolish all those structures.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Chaos in Parliament over budget approval (Video)

0

There was Chaos in parliament on Wednesday, December 1, 2021 after First Deputy Speaker, Joseph Osei-Wusu ruled in favour of the NPP following Minority’s motion to set aside Tuesday’s 2022 budget approval.

The 2022 budget statement was on Friday rejected by the country’s Parliament after a heated debate.

The rejection was made possible after all 137 Minority Members of Parliament (MPs) voted against the motion on Friday while members of the Majority Caucus had abandoned their seats in protest against alleged bias on the part of the Speaker of Parliament Prior to the crucial voting, the Speaker had called for a head count to establish if the House had form a quorum in order to proceed.

A quorum was formed per the Speaker’s judgement even though members of the Majority caucus had staged a walkout.

All members of the Minority Caucus proceeded to reject the 2022 budget when the question on the motion for the approval of the budget was put out.

But on Tuesday, the budget was approved by the Majority in the absence of the Minority.

While in parliament to make further deliberations on the 2022 budget, the Minority suggested that the budget’s approval be reversed.

But the First Deputy Speaker overruled the motion by the Minority Leader to reverse the approval of the budget leading to attempts by some Minority MPs to snatch the Mace, which is the symbol of authority in Parliament.

Read Also: GTBank Di Asa season 5: Five More evicted

Read Also: Budget: No consensus henceforth- NDC to NPP MPs

consensus

The Deputy National Communications Officer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Mr Godwin Ako Gunn NDC says there is not going to be any consensus building between the Majority and Minority in Parliament henceforth.

According to him, the Minority MPs urged the Majority to remove and or reduce some items from the budget, but they refused.

The 2022 budget statement was on Friday rejected by the country’s Parliament after a heated debate.

Continue Reading:

Read Also: 2022 Budget rejected, Majority Caucus walk out

Ghana| Atinkaonline.com| Porcia Oforiwaa Ofori
Writer’s email: [email protected]

Mahama observes elections in Gambia

0

Former President and 2020 Flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), John Dramani Mahama is in Gambia to observe the country’s general elections.

In a tweet, Former President John Dramani Mahama said he met with Justice Hassan Bubacar Jallow, Chief Justice of the Gambia, and some Justices of the Supreme Court this morning as part of our pre-election assessment meetings.

He added that the discussions centered on the Judiciary’s preparations for the election taking place on the 4th of December.

Former President John Dramani Mahama is currently in Gambia to observe the elections in that country.

He mentioned that the discussions centered on the Judiciary’s preparations for the election taking place on the 4th of December.

Read Also: Covid-19: Ghana records 2 cases of deadly ‘Omicron’ variant

“Met with Justice Hassan Bubacar Jallow, Chief Justice of The Gambia, and some Justices of the Supreme Court this morning as part of our pre-election assessment meetings. Discussions centred on the Judiciary’s preparations for the election taking place on the 4th of December.

“Election observer Mission visited the Gambian Independent Electoral Commission for a meeting with its Chairman, Alieu Momarr Njai,” Former President Mahama tweeted.

Gambia will hold its first presidential elections since it ousted longtime authoritarian leader Yahya Jammeh. 

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com | Vivian Adu | [email protected]   

$10m steel production plant commissioned

0

Iron and steel manufacturing company, Fabrimetal Ghana Ltd, has commissioned a new section mill plant at its Prampram factory premises to expand production.

The $10 million investment is part of the company’s expansion project to address the growing demand for steel products in the market.

It also forms part of the company’s avowed confidence in the economy, hence the investment.

Section mills are facilities that carry out series of processes to produce angle bars, flat bars channels, square bars among other merchant bars aimed at meeting the growing needs of the construction and fabrication industry.

A Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Michael Okyere Baafi, who led a delegation to the factory premises near Prampram in the Greater Accra Region, applauded the efforts of Fabrimetal Ghana and the private sector in general in assisting in the steady growth of the local manufacturing economy.

Read Also: GTBank Di Asa Season 5: Obolo and friends go home

He said the government in recognition of these significant contributions by the private sector had also introduced industrial development programmes such as the 1D1F initiative to boost private sector development.

“The private sector-led IDIF initiative seeks to change the nature of Ghana’s economy from one that is dependent on exports of raw materials and imports of finished goods to one that is focused on manufacturing, value addition and export of processed goods”, he said

Conducive environment

According to him, through the initiative, the government had created the necessary conducive environment for businesses to access funding from financial institutions and other support services from government agencies.

He gave the assurance that the Ministry of Trade and Industry would continue to support the private sector especially towards the growth of the local manufacturing industry.

The Board Chairman of the Ghana Integrated Iron ore and Steel Development Corporation (GIISDEC), Alhaji Umar Farouk Aliu Mahama, said his outfit was glad to see a leap in the development of companies in the steel environment regardless of how small it might look.

He said developed countries had reached their current state of development as a result of steel, adding that countries such as the United States of America had spent millions of dollars in acquisition of steel, therefore there was the need for Ghana to mine, process and produce steel to spur its industrialisation agenda.

Ore discovery

He said Ghana’s iron ore reserves discovered so far was projected to be in the region of 6.4 billion metric tonnes estimated at $ 1.7 trillion, enough to push Ghana up the ladder of leading iron and steel producing countries in the world

The Managing Director of Fabrimetal Ghana, Mr Rohit Raj, said the inauguration of the new section mill was a celebration of Ghana’s march towards industrialisation and self reliance.

He said the company started operation in 2016 with the commercial production of High Tensile Iron rods which were hitherto largely imported into the country.

Mr Raj said five years down the line, the importation of High Tensile Iron rods had reduced drastically of which Fabrimetal Ghana had played a key role in supporting all the major construction projects requiring that type of rods.

He explained that their products were aimed to be an import substitute with emphasis on the ability to produce internationally accepted quality in Ghana which they had achieved.

According to him, with the new section mill, the company’s investments in Ghana currently stood at $40 million.

Source: Graphic

GTBank Di Asa: Another eviction show tonight

0

Five more persons are expected to go home today after a dancehall edition of Atinka TV’s flagship reality show, GTBank Di Asa Season five tonight, December 1, 2021.

Already, 27 contestants have been evicted from the show which commenced with 60 plus size women.

For the season five, eviction is done both on Saturdays and Wednesdays unlike the previous seasons.

At the end of today’s show, those who do not get enough votes will suffer eviction.
The show which will be held at the Sika Hall inside Atinka Media Village at Avenor junction will be live on Atinka TV and on Facebook live on Atinka TV Ghana at 6.30 p.m respectively.

The GTBank Di Asa Season Five will award the ultimate winner with a brand new salon car.

The first runner up will be given a mini truck (Abossey Okai Macho), while the second runner up takes home a tricycle (Aboboyaa).

Aside these, the queens will also enjoy goodies from the sponsors of the show.
Meanwhile, the public is encouraged to vote for their favourite contestants on shortcode *737*215# on all networks to keep them in the competition.

Read Also: GTBank Di Asa Season 5: Obolo and friends go home

Read Also: GTBank Di Asa season 5: Five More evicted

In other news: GTBank Di Asa: Eviction free show held

Di
Some of the queens and the MCs on stage

The first eviction show of Atinka TV’s flagship reality TV show, Di Asa Season FIve was held on Saturday, November 6, 2021.

This was after an initial freestyle edition was held at the Sika Hall of Atinka Media Village (AMV) on Wednesday.

Although it was an eviction show, none of the ladies were evicted.

This was to enable the fans identify their favourite queen so that they can vote for them.

This year, 60 plus size women qualified for the main GTBank Di Asa season five audition.

They were welcomed to a cocktail dinner at the Dor Events Annex on Friday, October 29th 2021.

Ghana| Atinkaonline.com| Porcia Oforiwaa Ofori
Writer’s email: [email protected]

Taxes: Stabilize the Government but Keep the People Alive

0

Taxes are good. No government can survive without taxes, it seems. The changing taste of society puts serious economic pressures on governments to provide amenities for its citizens.

As time changes, the desire of the people changes, and so does the responsibility of the government. The wishes of the governed migrate from one stage of desire to another. Society is not done with its sophistication yet.

The need to provide employment for the teaming youth, coupled with the need to ensure the continuous existence of a safe business environment to ensure that business not only thrive, but grow in an expansive sequence is a non-negotiable duty, burden even, on the often restrained government.

In fact, the more time passes, the more previous, and sometimes current, amenities become outdated and outmoded, requiring the government to follow trends and provide the citizens with their ever changing tastes. The government is never done providing, and the people are never done demanding. Then comes funding.

Every step by the government to meet the demands of the people requires a corresponding need to fund. Mostly, the desired progress of the people and the government are inhibited by the limited, if not unavailable, funds required to propagate the dreams of the government and the governed. The proceeds from natural resources alone are not enough, taxes are a sine qua non.

However, over reliance on taxes as a means to fund public spendings, if left unchecked, can cripple the desired economic growth. Sometimes, excessive resort to taxation as a means of raising public funds produces the inverse of the desired result, worst even.

It is not out of place for economics experts to constantly warn governments against the temptation of overburdening its citizens with excessive taxes. In fact, H.E. Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia in 2015, the well known economist, before assuming office as vice president of Ghana in 2016, whilst addressing the issue of taxation under the then NDC government, and in a post made on twitter, made the observation on the issue in the following words:

“NDC has resorted to increasing taxes under the economic difficulties they created. An NPP Government will do differently.” Dr. Mahamadu Bawumia (as he then was) in a twitter post dated 2nd December, 2015 at 12:21PM

On Wednesday the 17th day of November, 2021, Ghana’s Finance Minister appeared before the parliament of Ghana to present the budget, which was dubbed the “Agyenkwa budget”, for the 2022 fiscal year. The budget was received with mixed reactions from Ghanaians. Whereas some members believed that budget to be in the right direction, others believed that the budget would deepen the financial woes of the ordinary Ghanaian.

Read Also: Covid-19: Ghana records 2 cases of deadly ‘Omicron’ variant

In fact, contrary to the name given to the budget, a section of Ghanaians, made up of mostly members of the opposition political party, believed the budget is intended to create woes for, rather to save, the ordinary Ghanaians.

It therefore did not come as a surprise when the members of parliament from the two major political parties in Ghana, the NPP and the NDC, were sharply divided on the approval of the budget. So heated was the disagreement along the political lines that when the budget came for approval on Friday 26th November, 2021, the majority (NPP) had to stage a walkout in parliament which led to the unanimous rejection of the budget by the minority (NDC).

Even so, the rejection has created chaos among the intelligentsia, mostly those within the legal fraternity, as to the constitutionality or otherwise of the rejection. This however is not the main focus of this write up.

Key to the content of the budget was the issue of taxes. Whereas the government sought to abolish some taxes, such as the collection of road tolls, it also sought to either introduce new taxes or cancel some tax exemption that were hitherto enjoyed by stakeholders. The public outcry, it seems, is centered on the consequential effect of the new taxes on the prices of commodities.

For example, some drivers have threatened to embark on a strike to register their displeasure at the rate at which taxes on fuel have increased fuel prices. The increment in fuel prices, they say, has led to a massive reduction in their profits as almost all their proceeds from their work go into the purchase of fuel.

One is therefore tempted to ask; What therefore is the aim of the government for the introduction of the new taxes?

As intimated earlier, the government has cancelled some taxes. However, the taxes introduced seem to overshadow the taxes sought to be abolished especially when one considers the net effect of the taxes.

One of the justifications for the proposed taxes is to ensure that more persons are brought into the tax web, thereby creating a larger pool of taxable persons in order to increase the revenue generated by and for the government via tax. It is argued, quite strenuously, that less than 40% of Ghanaians eligible for the payment of taxes actually pay tax. In a publication dated 6th January, 2021 by pulse.com.gh, it was stated that out of the six million eligible Ghanaian taxpayers, only 1.5 million pay taxes according to a research conducted by the Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC), (find the article athttps://www.pulse.com.gh/business/only-15-million-ghanaians-pay-tax/rrs0j2y). I cannot vouch for the credibility of this research. Of course, there is a likely aorta of truth in it. The argument goes further to point out that the few number of persons caught by the tax web is overburdened, especially when the government has had to rely on them to fund exorbitant projects.

I believe the discussion should go beyond the number of people paying taxes. It should, rather, veer into the question of “why are less people paying taxes?”. By this, an attempt is made, first, to ascertain the reason(s) behind a few people paying taxes. Upon reaching the reason, an attempt can then be made at resolving the problem from the roots.

The solution may not lie in “how do we compel more people to pay taxes” in its simple form, as has been portrayed by the leading arguments in support of the increased taxes contained in the budget before parliament. The restriction of the focus into getting more people to pay taxes will, not only mislead us, but will blind us from dealing appropriately with the canker that seems to be seeping into our finances, and our economy generally.

The question, I think, should be “why are people UNABLE to pay taxes?”. Nobody can avoid the payment of indirect taxes- that is to say taxes on goods and services consumed by the citizens. With this in mind, one can safely assume that the kind of taxes that are mostly avoided by the majority of the tax paying class are the direct taxes. In effect, the government’s plaints centre mostly on the non-payment of direct taxes.

If the above is true, then I believe it is not remote to think that the main reason for the non payment of taxes, direct taxes if you call it, is either because;

  1. People are unemployed, hence unable to pay taxes, OR
  2. People are not properly employed OR
  3. The tax net is so porous that tax avoidance does not just look attractive, but easy.

The main problem of this country, which has birthed the need to resort to taxes, is unemployment. Unless we commit ourselves into solving the unemployment canker, the taxing menace will never end. It will grow into a cycle that will keep coming back at us in different forms, but with the same discomfort.

SUGGESTED STRATEGY TO ADDRESS THE ISSUE

  1. Grant transparent tax incentives to businesses to increase employment: One of the main justification for the increase in taxes is the excuse that less people are paying taxes as compared to those who ought to pay taxes. In fact, the report is that less than 10% of Ghana’s population pay tax to the government. The reason for this is not far from a guess. The rate of unemployment in the country continues to rise, whilst job opportunities keep declining each year. This has created a gap between the available jobs and the available labour. The pressure on the government continues to mount. However, where more people are employed, the available persons within the taxable net will increase. Other things being equal, taxes will increase. If the right step is not taken towards creating a more accommodating environment for businesses to thrive, the few employed people will continue to suffer on the sharp edge of this taxing scheme. Private business employment seems to be the way forward, especially where the finance minister has made it clear that the government pay roll is presently full. The proper way, I suggest, is to give transparent irresistible tax exemptions or incentives to businesses that are able to employ a certain high number of persons, and pay them above a minimum salary determined by the government. These businesses are likely to thrive, employ more people and pay them good salaries which will, in effect, create revenue for the government through the taxing of the incomes of those employed. This, apart from motivating businesses to employ more people, will create revenue for the government. This approach will better yield the desired result if done with more transparency, especially where there usually are issues of distrust among the populace as to the manner in which tax incentives are awarded to some individuals and companies. The accusations normally centre on the fact that these incentives are usually given to political faithfuls or persons and businesses with political connections.
  1. Tackle the issue of corruption and unnecessary abandonment of expensive projects to avoid “leakages”: Among the problems that keeps creating the need to tax the people more is the unnecessary siphoning of public funds, overspending and the abandonment of government projects even after huge sums of monies have been expended on them. Ghana continues to suffer the menace of corruption, especially among persons occupying positions of trust in the government. An example comes to mind. After securing a loan facility for the construction of affordable housing units for Ghanaians, it was later revealed that the government actually paid sums far in excess of the actual works done on the project. This is in reference to Ghana’s notorious Saglemi Housing saga, an issue that still remains unresolved. It is reported that the contractor in charge of the said project was paid the amount of $179million for a $64million work done. Even after such huge sums have been expended on the project, all the housing units so far built sit in the Bush uncompleted and unoccupied. These are the leakages that create the financial vacuum which occasionally require that the government goes to the already burdened few people within the tax net to tax them even more. More recently, it was also reported that 2 multi million projects initiated by the government have been abandoned at the Asueyi gas production plant, injuring the public funds whilst we keep looking for strategies to tax the people more and, in most cases, borrow money from the international market to fund projects. The repayment of these loans together with their inevitable interests will be funded through taxation of the citizens. The leakages seem to be more, and increasingly so. I am not oblivious of the government’s intended commitment to protect the public funds. However, if more is not done towards the realisation of this promise, our economic progress as a nation will be stalled and thwarted by the greedy and inconsiderate few.
  1. Ensure that the taxes paid by the Citizens reflect in their lives and living conditions: Anybody who pays taxes is pretty much aware of the benefits of paying taxes. Once the taxes are used to improve upon the living conditions of Ghanaians, it will be less likely for them to deliberately refuse to pay taxes or look for loopholes in the laws to avoid tax payments. People will always find means to avoid the payment of taxes by minimising their tax obligations. However, where the taxpayer is committed to paying his taxes but sees no reflection of the taxes paid in their lives, they are more likely to avoid the payment of taxes. There is therefore the need for the construction of the appropriate legal framework to ensure that taxes paid by the citizens are utilised to their benefits. This will not only motivate the people to pay their taxes but will also deter corrupt officials from siphoning proceeds of taxes out of the national coffers.

CONCLUSION

The goal is to address the issue of taxation in the most apolitical way possible. The desire is simple; to keep the government machinery running without choking the people in whose interest the government machinery must be kept running. Government needs funding, but the people need to live. They need to survive. The responsibility of the people to the government need not be shirked. However, the people need the government to free, not chase, them. The responsibility of the government to the people is dual; a sword and a shield. The people must be in a position to use the government as a sword to fight social problems and as a shield against exploitation of any form. This, I believe, is the ultimate goal.

Ends.

Godfred Adjabeng

House No.: D118, Kwahu-Nkwatia.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

No rivalry between Mahama and Kwabena Duffuor – NDC

0

The Deputy National Communications Officer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Mr Godwin Ako Gunn says there is no rivalry between Former President, John Dramani Mahama and former Governor of the Bank of Ghana, (BoG), Dr. Kwabena Duffuor and their supporters over the flagbearer spot of the party.

Few days ago, Dr. Kwabena Duffuor disclosed that if given the nod to lead the NDC as its flagbearer in the 2024 general elections, he would choose either the current Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin or Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu as his running mate.

Read Also: Budget: No consensus henceforth- NDC to NPP MPs

Dr. Duffuor over the last few months has been rumoured as one of the people that will rival ex-President John Dramani Mahama for the flagbearership position of the main opposition party.

After months of uncertainty, the former Finance Minister finally disclosed that he harbours a dream to be the flagbearer of the NDC.

Going further, the former BoG governor opened up on the likely candidates he will consider as his running mates.

This has got a section of the public saying there is rivalry between Mahama’s supporters and Kwabena Duffuors supporters and the two great men of the NDC.

Read Also: 2022 Budget rejected, Majority Caucus walk out

But speaking on Atinka TV’s morning show, Ghana Nie with Ekourba Gyasi Simpremu, Mr Ako Gunn said Kwabena Duffuor’s submission was intellectual and as a democratic party, they welcome everyone to express their views.

He said the NDC is united and therefore there is nothing like Pro – Mahama or Pro whoever.

However, he said if John Mahama decides to contest in 2024, millions of Ghanaians will support him win, including the NDC

Read Also: Parliament approves 2022 budget despite Minority’s boycott

Read Also: We want to remain employed- Tollbooth attendants to Gov’t

Read Also: We’ve not been re-assigned – Toll Booth attendants cry

Ghana| Atinkaonline.com| Porcia Oforiwaa Ofori
Writer’s email: [email protected]