November 27, 2023 2023-1964 Ghana issues Budget Statement and Economic Policy for the 2024 Financial Year - The Government of Ghana has provided an overview of the Budget Statement and Economic Policy for the 2024 Fiscal Year.
- This Tax Alert highlights key tax aspects of the 2024 Budget, including changes value added tax and import duty provisions.
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Executive summary On 15 November 2023, Ghana's Minister for Finance and Economic Planning (the Minister), Honourable Ken Ofori-Atta, read the 2024 Budget Statement and Economic Policy (the 2024 Budget) in Parliament. Detailed discussion According to the Minister, the 2024 Budget has a two-fold short- to medium-term objective: - To keep focusing on growth
- To remain on course with this growth trajectory, maintain currency stability and disinflation
Key tax measures proposed by the 2024 Budget include: - Target an increase in Ghana's tax-to-GDP (i.e., gross domestic product) ratio from the current 13% to 18-20% to be at comparable levels with peer countries
- Extend the value added tax (VAT) Zero-Rating provision for locally manufactured textiles and locally assembled vehicles until December 2025
- Reduce the VAT rate on commercial properties from the standard rate of 15% to a 5% flat rate to simplify administration and enhance revenue mobilization
- Reduce the rate of VAT and levies on locally manufactured sanitary pads from 15% to 0%
- Restrict deductions under the Income Tax Act, 2015, Act 896 (as amended) to invoices generated through the VAT Certified Invoicing System
- Expand coverage of the VAT electronic invoicing system to cover a wider range of taxpayers
- Grant import duty waivers on electronic vehicles used for public transportation for eight years
- Provide import duty exemptions to local manufacturers that import raw materials to produce sanitary pads
- Collaborate with the Ghana Medical Association to secure import tax waivers on vehicles imported for use by medical doctors — aiming to alleviate their transportation challenges
- Exempt from import taxes agricultural machinery, equipment, and inputs, along with medical consumables and raw materials for the pharmaceutical industry
- Expand the coverage of environmental excise duties to include plastic packaging and industrial and vehicle emissions to address the negative externalities associated with plastic waste and pollution
- Provide an eight-year import duty exemption for both semi-knocked and completely knocked-down vehicles to persons engaged in assembling electric vehicles
- Review the Stamp Duty Act to increase the rates to align them with current economic conditions
- Adjust the tax-free Personal Income Tax (PIT) band upward to exclude the new National Daily Minimum Wage (NDMW) from taxation
- Introduce a simplified tax return for individuals in the informal sector to encourage voluntary tax compliance as part of a modified taxation scheme
——————————————— For additional information with respect to this Alert, please contact the following: Ernst & Young Chartered Accountants, Accra Ernst & Young Société d'Avocats, Pan African Tax — Transfer Pricing Desk, Paris Ernst & Young LLP (United Kingdom), Pan African Tax Desk, London Ernst & Young LLP (United States), Pan African Tax Desk, New York Published by NTD's Tax Technical Knowledge Services group; Carolyn Wright, legal editor |