Pass E-levy Bill – Seth Terkper Urges Parliament

Pass E-levy Bill – Seth Terkper Urges Parliament

A former Minister for Finance and Economic Planning, Seth Emmanuel Terkper, has called on Parliament to approve the E-levy as soon as possible, as a delay will affect the budget.

Speaking to an Accra-based radio station, the former Finance Minister said the current budget deficit is so huge that not even the GRA revenue can resolve it.

“The deficit is 55% but they are supposed to collect 80, right? We are talking about 30 extra within that 30 extra, or let’s say 25 extra because they did about 57.
“So within the extra amount that they are supposed to collect, is the benchmark because the values were supposed to go up so that they can collect, right? So as long as we don’t take a decision on that it is affecting the budget, and it’s gradually sending uncertainty to the market because they are saying hey, you have done a budget,” he explained.

2022 Budget Cut

Though some people have criticized Ken Ofori-Atta’s decision to cut budget expenditure by 20%, without recourse to Parliament, Mr. Seth Tekper opined that, this is not the first time a Finance Minister has taken such action without parliamentary approval.

“You know the minister just announced 20% reduction. Are we reviewing budget mid-year in January already? Because to cut expenditure by 20% is not a small amount of money. It is about 27 billion out of the 135 or 137 billion, right? And that is a significant amount of money. It didn’t go to Parliament. It is not just this government.
“You remember, when we read a budget in 2015 and then crude oil prices fell by March, Former President John Dramani Mahama was sending me to Parliament to go and explain to the nation. That was March, right? So I am not faulting that it’s being said in January. They should tell us that there’s a real problem with the fiscal situation,” he said.

Free SHS

With the deficit growing wide, Seth Terkper also asked the government to take a second look at the Free SHS policy because it is “not fiscally sustainable.”

According to the former Minister, judging from the amount of money spent on the Free SHS, it will always influence government’s fiscal deficit.

“When you are in that seat others who see the policy as popular for the government, therefore would normally not agree with you, including other colleague Ministers and the rest. But it gets to a point where you must because, when you correct first the fiscal situation and then you correct the policy, it will even not be sustainable within the consensus that the nation will agree that it is sustainable.”

Wilberforce Asare

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