Following certain adjustments to the 2022 budget, Yapei-Kusawgu MP John Jinapor has rejected the idea that the government has made some concessions to the Minority in Parliament.
Mr. Jinapor condemned the story as “very simplistic” on Citi TV’s The Point of View after the administration reacted to five items the Minority wanted amended in the 2022 budget.
The Minority demanded that the Electronic Transaction Levy be suspended, that the Agyapa deal ideas be removed from the budget, that the language on the Aker Energy agreement be rewritten, and that the benchmark import values be reviewed.
While the administration made some improvements in response to public pressure, the primary concerns about the e-levy remained unaddressed.
“If you just change the sentence of Aker to say we shall pursue the Aker Energy deal in accordance with Parliamentary approval, I don’t see that as a concession. We are just asking you to do what is proper,” Mr. Jinapor said.
“If you use that alone and say that because you agreed that the budget statement did not affect what the house approved and corrected it and then move on that to say I have granted a concession and so you must also agree on the other leg, it is too simplistic. I don’t see that as a concession at all,” the MP added.
In his view, the revisions made by the government “do not affect the fiscal tables.”
“The fees and charges affect the fiscal tables because of the capping and realignment. And also, it affects you, the ordinary Ghanaian.”
While the Minority Leader has suggested that the Minority would be open to compromise, Mr. Jinapor stressed that his side ultimately wanted the e-levy suspended.
“We are clear as far as our position is concerned that we are against the e-levy in its totality.”
But he added that “during negotiations, a lot of figures came up.”
The Minority may be open to the levy being reduced from 1.75 percent to 1 percent and the cap on transactions levied raised to from GHS 100 to GHS300 according to the Minority Leader.