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Ghana's Parliament is Urged to Implement Urgent Bills to Complete Prior Action on the $3 Billion IMF Bailout 

 

Ghana’s Parliament has been urged to implement Income Tax (Amendment) Bill, Excise Duty and Excise Tax Stamp (Amendment) Bills, and the Growth and Sustainability Levy Bill to complete the prior actions of the Ghana/IMF $3 billion Agreement.

The plea made by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo indicated that would put the government in readiness for "our presentation to the Fund Board and, more importantly, bolster our domestic revenue mobilization efforts."

The president, who thanked Parliament for its support throughout the process, which included the passage of some key revenue laws, said the government recognizes that sustained growth must be deliberate, especially in a global landscape marked by forces of technology, trade, and intense competition.

He said inorder to sustained economic growth required deliberate policy implementation, combined with leadership, social cohesion, and deep investments in the core capabilities of people, firms, and institutions to harness the country’s opportunities.

President Akufo-Addo indicated, is why, together with the private sector counterparts, the government had anchored Ghana’s medium-term growth drivers on competitiveness, integration, adaptation, and digital innovation.

All these, according to him, are aimed at raising Ghana’s per capita GDP from the current US$2,500 to US$4,500 (aligning with the Ghana Beyond Aid Charter) by 2030.

Apart from the enhancement of revenue and the judicious use of resources, President Akufo-Addo said it is imperative that a deliberate policy initiative be introduced to reduce the country’s huge import bill.

Last year, the President set up a five-member ad hoc cabinet committee to work on a policy to enhance domestic production and export development with a four-fold strategy.

However, reducing the country’s import bill in the short, medium, and long terms; enhancing domestic productive capacity in selected products; generating widespread employment opportunities; and diversifying and expanding Ghana’s export capacity to Africa and beyond, especially through the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

In 2021, Ghana’s total import bill was put at US$13.7 billion, according to GRA/ICUMS. on the evidence of existing local productive capacity.

According to President Akufo-Addo, the government had identified a list of 20 priority products in the categories of primary agricultural products, processed foods, and manufactured goods, “where we can confidently enhance domestic production.”

Amongst these are rice, fish, poultry, fruit juice, sugar, tomatoes, vegetable oils, oil palm, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, soaps and detergents, insulated wire, ceramic products, corrugated paper and paperboard, cement/clinker, and motor vehicles.

He when further President Akufo-Addo, report on the implementation modalities to enhance domestic productive capacity has been prepared, and “once confirmed, the new Minister for Trade and Industry will roll out urgently a series of initiatives to implement the policy.”

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