However, the government did not do so.
Prof Quartey explained on the Business Focus programme with Alfred Ocansey on TV3 Monday, August 2 that the government witnessed a revenue shortfall in the first half of the year owing to the pandemic hence, the expectation was that monies were going to be raised.
Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta during the presentation of the mid-year review statement on Thursday, July 29 told Parliament that he did not come to ask for more money from the House.
He also said he did not come for more taxes. Rather, he came to update the House and the country on the performance of the economy during the first half of the year.
“I have not come here today to ask for more money, I have not come to ask for more taxes, I have come to update the house on the performance of the economy for the first half of the year,” he said amidst claps from members of Parliament.
He further stated that the Akufo-Addo administration took bold and decisive measures to deal with the negative impact of the covid on the economy.
Reacting to this, Prof Quartey said “There is a revenue shortfall and one will expect that we raise revenue at this time so we don’t have to borrow but unfortunately we have missed the target. But one can be assured that normal revenue trickles in.
“In the last part of the year, we received more tax revenue so I am hopeful even if we miss the target at all we might not be too far from the target.
“ At the moment judging from what we have received so far it appears we have received less revenue than expected Ceteris paribus should nothing happens, then we will rake in more revenue but if the third wave intensifies then we may miss our target.
“Already some economic activities have been banned. We cannot have some outdoor activities and all of these have some repercussions on demands, have repercussions on our output and incomes as well.
If we were in normal times, one would expect that we rake in as much revenue in the second half of the year as in the first half but one aspect of this year's review that is encouraging is the transparency that we have seen from the government prior to the mid-year review.
“I was agitating and a couple of people were asking that government tell us how well we have performed and how well we are raising the needed revenue. And you could see in the mid-year review, some figures on the new levies, financial sector levy, Covid-19 levy, and sanitation levy,” he explained. Read Full Story
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