Parliament has passed the Special Petroleum Tax Amendment Bill to reduce the tax from 15 percent to 13 percent.
The amendment follows recent protests on the rising cost of fuel, as well as calls from the minority for the Special Petroleum Tax to be scrapped.
Speaking to Citi Business News, a Deputy Finance Minister, Kweku Kwarteng stated that making the Special Petroleum tax a specific levy would minimize its impact on consumers.
He explained that the amendment will protect Ghanaians in the future as petroleum prices go up.
“The Special Petroleum Tax was introduced by the Mahama administration. I do not think if they thought it was that bad, they would introduce it. When they introduced it, we did criticize it that they ought not to make it ad valorem. They ought not to make it a percentage of the price because it will mean that as fuel prices go up, the taxes would also up,” he recalled.
According to him, the then New Patriotic Party(NPP) members in the minority and opposition did not describe the tax as needles but rather pushed for it to be made a specific tax.
Mr. Kwarteng pointed out that the minority at the time insisted that, the tax be made a specific tax to cushion Ghanaians anytime there is a price hike on the world market.
“What we have demonstrated today is that we believe in that we believed in. That is why we have converted it from ad valorem to specific. So if you want to know the exact impact, let’s wait a couple of months down the line when fuel prices are high and then you ask me if the special petroleum tax was still ad valorem.? what would have been the tax level, and then at that point you would be able to see the real significance of the amendment that we have achieved in parliament today,” he argued.
Admitting that the current amendment will not reduce price of fuel at the pumps, Mr. Kwarteng appealed to Ghanaians to appreciate the purpose of the reduction.
“There is some reduction but our focus is not a reduction in the fuel prices now. It is a long term strategy to ensure that consumers pay less as fuel prices go up in the international market,” he said.
–
By: Lawrence Segbefia/citibusinessnews.com/Ghana