Packaged Water Producers Urge Govt To Suspend 5% Excise Tax

The National Association of Sachet and Packaged Water Producers (NASPAWAP) has joined forces with plastic manufacturers in urging the government to indefinitely suspend the newly introduced 5% excise tax on finished plastic products.

In a statement, the association emphasised that this appeal is driven by concerns over the economic hardship that the 5% tax would impose on consumers.

NASPAWAP highlighted that bottled and sachet water prices have seen considerable increases since January 2024, largely due to Cedi’s depreciation against the US dollar.

They argued that the 5% excise tax, which is presumably intended to tackle environmental issues caused by plastics, would further aggravate the financial strain on consumers.

“We believe the motive for the 5% extra excise tax would be to rake in funds to tackle the menace plastics are posing to the environment. There is an existing 10% environmental excise tax on selected plastic at the ports of entry. We were part of the decision to tax plastic granules at the entry ports. This method broadens the tax base since all plastic granules are imported. However, at the implementation stage, only a selected few were captured,” part of the statement read.

The association proposed an alternative approach, “Our suggestion to the government is to reinforce the environmental Excise tax at the entry points by reducing the tax rate to 1% and make it applicable to all imported plastic granules without any exceptions.

“However, Semi-finished plastics imported into the country be taxed at 10 % of the CIF value. We believe this will rake in more funds for plastic management than the additional 5% Excise tax imposition on finished plastics.

“We also wish to put on record that since the inception of plastics in this country, all interventions in respect of managing plastic have been solely borne by the private sector. From the collection point to the recycling stations there has not been any subsidy from the government to the collectors etc.

“NASPAWAP is therefore calling on government to heed to the call to suspend indefinitely the additional 5% Excise on finished plastics, and engage with stakeholders,” the association added.

Source: Adomonline

By Wontumi1