A Minister of State at the Finance Ministry, Charles Adu Boahen, does not side with suggestions that the government’s decision to tax Mobile Money transactions will disadvantage the poor.
The government, as part of strategies to widen the country’s tax net, announced the introduction of an Electronic Transaction Levy.
It will be a 1.75 percent charge on all electronic transactions, including Mobile Money (Momo).
However, the levy will be waived for transactions that amount to GH¢100 or less in a day or approximately GH¢3,000 per month.
The Minister on the Citi Breakfast Show said the exemptions given to mobile money transactions below GH¢100 will be in the interest of poor Ghanaians.
“We have exempted the GH¢100 per day from this levy because we want to ensure the vulnerable in society are excluded and also that it does not deter or delay the financial inclusion drive.”
“We did some surveys and analysis and realized that about 40 percent of transfers are below GH¢100, so essentially 40 percent of the populace are protected from this levy. And so we believe that, by far, it takes care of the vulnerable in society,” he said on the Citi Breakfast Show.
The 1.75 percent charge on all electronic transactions has been widely criticized, with the Minority in Parliament vowing to oppose the decision.
However, Mr. Adu-Boahen justified the decision, saying it was the most viable approach towards standardizing taxation.
“We have to come up with a way to democratise tax revenue, and it seems the only effective way to do so was something tied to mobile money.”
It is the expectation of the government, that the implementation of the new policy will come into force effective January 1, 2022, if the appropriation is passed by Parliament.