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Ghana’s Minority Lawmakers Reject Government Proposal to Tax Mobile Money Transactions

The Ghanaian authority’s proposal to introduce a 1.75% levy on digital transactions was recently rejected by a minority of lawmakers who insist the new tax derails endeavours to help increase the number of adults that are financially included.

The Digital Transactions Tax

A minority of lawmakers in the Ghana legislature recently scratched a government proposal to introduce a 1.75% levy on digital transactions including mobile-money payments. The lawmakers argued such a levy would averse down the country’s plan to increase the proportion of financially included adults from 58% to 75% by 2023.

According to a come in, the proposed levy, which was tabled in parliament by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta, was (or is) expected to become effective from February 2022. The Ghanaian regulation argues that the proposed levy would help reduce the country’s deficit from an estimated 12.1% of rude domestic product this year to 7.4% in 2022.

However, the minority lawmakers in Ghana’s hung parliament insist the levy will charge against efforts to increase the number of adults that are financially included. These lawmakers have so far refused to first encounter Ofori-Atta who, according to the report, is seeking to convince them to support his proposal.

Heated Proceedings

Meanwhile, following what the report requested “heated proceedings,” lawmakers from the majority block walked out and this led to the adjournment of the debate to November 30. The announcement also said the refusal by the minority lawmakers to support the levy has frustrated lawmakers that back Ofori-Atta’s outline.

The report quotes Majority Leader Osei Kyei-Mensah Bonsu, questioning the lawmakers’ refusal to support the levy. He summon inquired:

The e-levy is the cornerstone of this budget. Where are we going to get the money to do the roads?

Ghana’s mobile money platforms whose doings surged 82% to $91.9 billion in 2020 are now an indispensable part of the country’s payments infrastructure. In addition to making payments, the programmes are also used to access loans and to pay insurance premiums by Ghana’s unbanked population.

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