Some mobile money users in the Ashanti Region are skeptical about the promise Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia made concerning the scrapping of the e-levy if he becomes president of Ghana.
The controversial tax was introduced in 2022 by the Akufo-Addo government.
While delivering a public lecture on his vision for the country after he was elected flagbearer of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP), Dr. Bawumia minced no words in declaring his opposition to taxes on electronic financial transactions, stating that he would abolish the e-levy if elected as President.
The mobile money users have described the position of the NPP presidential candidate as contradictory, doubting if he will indeed scrap it if given the nod since he’s part of the government that introduced it.
They welcomed Dr. Bawumia’s promise of scrapping the e-levy, questioning the sudden change of mind.
“Taxes are very good at building a nation, and before every country or nation develops, it will actually depend on the taxes the people pay. But the issue is that you, as a vice president, are with us, and you are in the system. You knew the taxes were too much, thus the e-levy was too much for Ghanaians. Why then did you sit there for these taxes to be imposed on us? Now because you want power, you want to tell us that when you get the power you are going to remove these taxes. I think he’s lying to us, and I think he just wants to lure us to vote for him. Then afterward, he will deceive us. I think the vice president is lying to us; already he has been lying all this while. Everything they talk about, they don’t do so, it’s not a good idea. Ghanaians shouldn’t listen to him.”
Another user also stated, “It’s a good idea to reduce it or take it off; it will help us the citizens. From my perspective, it will help me because the e-levy is not helping us right now. He should be given a mandate to be president so that next year [2025] it will be reduced or taken off.”
An economist at the Economic Department of KNUST, Dr. Paul Owusu Takyi, has expressed concern that the e-levy be suspended to study the financial inclusion of the country before it is scrapped.
“People now don’t want to transact businesses online where they are going to be charged to pay the e-levy. Abolishing the e-levy will reduce tax revenue; what it means is that the government will need to find alternative ways to generate revenue to manage its fiscal deficit. It will also help financial inclusion, where many people will be integrated into the financial sector. Businesses, and payments conducted online will boom and create employment for the youth. The abolishment of the e-levy in the short term is a good proposition for the government to remove it now. The timing is right if it’s abolished,” Dr. Paul Owusu Takyi said.
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GNA