He stated that by increasing revenue in Ghana, the country would first have to shirk some of its tax practices, particularly tax exemptions while increasing efficiency in tax collection.
According to him, for a country that badly needs revenue to fix its debt to GDP ratio, Ghana grants too many tax exemptions.
He said he understood why it was important for Ghana to choose tax exemptions i.e. to attract more foreign investors into the country, but noted that empirical evidence has proven that too many tax exemptions have failed to provide the desired results.
“So you talked about efficiency, that’s one thing, to make sure that everybody pays what they should be paying. That for instance if you look at exemptions in Ghana it’s a big problem. There are too many exemptions.
“And this is a conversation we’re having with the Ministry of Finance. Very often countries think you can give so much incentives, so much concessions and exemptions to attract investors. But there are other ways that this can be done,” he said.
He added that “Empirical evidence has shown that these incentives excessively, in the long run, don’t work.”
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express Business Edition, he noted that there were several other pathways to attracting foreign investors while still gaining revenue.
He explained, “VAT exemptions are given to many big investors to facilitate their entry and to launch their activities. But in many countries, either you have a quick VAT refund, it’s like the investor pays his VAT and you process his refund in one month or two where’s the incentive to give the exemption when you can process the VAT very quickly.