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General News of Friday, 28 January 2022

    

Source: www.ghanaweb.live

Is the YouStart programme not well-planned and bankable? – Dr Kofi Amoah asks

Dr Kofi Amoah is a business mogul and philantropist Dr Kofi Amoah is a business mogul and philantropist

Parliament at an impasse over E-Levy

Government to impose 1.75% rate for E-Levy

Government must build trust among citizens for support, Dr Kofi Amoah


Business mogul, Dr Kofi Amoah has questioned the government’s decision to finance its YouStart entrepreneurial initiative with funds from the yet to be implemented E-Levy when it had

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He opines that although the government has set its intention on these programmes, there still remains a lack of trust among citizens to support initiatives.

The YouStart programme according to the government is one of the solutions to the alarming rate of unemployment in the country. The initiative is to encourage the youth to start their own businesses with the help of some banks in the country provided the entrepreneurial idea is scalable.

Meanwhile, the Government of Ghana has reiterated the need for the introduction of the E-Levy on numerous occasions since its announcement in the 2022 budget statement.

Although a decision to approve the E-Levy is yet to materialize in Parliament, the finance minister [Ken Ofori-Atta] has said revenue from the tax measure will go towards building more roads, creating jobs and opportunities for the youth and reduce the country’s dependence on debt assistance and also finance the YouStart programme.

But the Minority in Parliament has vowed to kick against approving the E-Levy citing it will place more hardship on the ordinary citizen. Also, a cross-section of the public have bemoaned the introduction of the tax measure.

The E-levy is a new tax measure introduced by the government in the 2022 Budget on basic transactions related to digital payments and electronic transactions aimed at widening the tax net and increasing revenue.

The measure, if approved, would place a charge of 1.75 percent on all electronic transactions that are more than GH¢100 daily (24 hours).

This will cover mobile money payments, ATM withdrawals, inward remittances among others.