Business Day (Ghana)

GRA to Complete E-VAT Implementa­tion in December 2024

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An Assistant Commission­er in Charge of Value Added Tax (VAT) Administra­tion with the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), Philip Acquah, has remarked that migration of businesses onto the Electronic Valued Added Tax (E-VAT) system is scheduled to end in December 2024.

The pilot phase, which started with 50 taxpayers across different sectors, was completed in October 2022.

The government has begun Phase One of the implementa­tion process with 600 taxpayers in the same industries/sectors and is scheduled to end in June 2023. Phase two of the E-VAT implementa­tion is projected to begin in December 2023.

Mr. Acquah disclosed this during a Quarterly Tax Dialogue Seminar Series on the implicatio­n of the E-VAT on businesses in Ghana, hosted by the UK- Ghana Chamber of Commerce in partnershi­p with PwC Ghana.

What is E-VAT?

According to Mr. Acquah, “E-VAT is just another term for the Electronic Invoicing system”. E-VAT transforms the manual invoice issuance process (paper-based) into an electronic format. It also allows for such invoices including debit and credit notes to be exchanged electronic­ally.

“With E-Invoicing, GRA will authentica­te and validate the invoices issued by taxpayers in real time”.

He further remarked that “we are not introducin­g any new law …[or] rate. All we’re doing is we’re connecting the Commission­er General’s invoicing system to taxpayers’ invoicing system such as that now the issuance of electronic invoices is made a default”.

E-VAT will promote a fair and equitable tax regime

Mr. Acquah noted that the manual invoicing regimes was fraught with many challenges. These include issues of forgery, lack of data for effective compliance, ‘carding’ of invoices, and significan­t man hours on auditing among others.

He explained that the implementa­tion of the electronic invoicing system will promote a fair and equitable VAT Regime, by eliminatin­g bottleneck­s militating against the current paperbased system.

Other benefits to businesses include improved documentat­ion and record keeping, streamlini­ng VAT refund processing, and reducing the compliance burden, amongst others.

Issues with the Electronic Invoicing System Mr. Acquah admitted that issues regarding the efficiency of the system were reported, such as system downtime and lack of response.

While a pilot test of the system refined its capabiliti­es, the GRA is also providing technical remote assistance to address the taxpayers’ issues in real time.

Change in the law

Clarifying an erroneous notion that the Ministry of Finance had sought and gotten an amendment to the VAT ACT to disadvanta­ge businesses, Daniel Nuer, the Head of Tax Policy at the Ministry of Finance said “the change was not to create a problem for everybody… the idea was to spread the onboarding of [businesses] onto the system over a year. But the law that was passed wasn’t that clear, so it was assumed that everybody had a year to transition.

“…And so, the one year was taken off is not because it was changed to make everybody a ‘tax criminal’, but then to allow the Commission­er General to continue his duties”.

He mentioned that the Ministry of Finance is currently working with the first batch of businesses. After completion, another batch of businesses will be notified as to when their migration to the electronic system will begin.

Mr. Nuer added that the E-VAT system will improve revenue generation to reduce budget deficits and is leveraging technology to achieve this purpose. He believed that this system will make businesses efficient and compliant.

Tax Prosecutio­n

Urging businesses to comply with the tax laws, Mr. Nuer reiterated that the non-payment of taxes is a criminal offence, and that government is enforcing the law through criminal prosecutio­ns because civil prosecutio­ns have not yielded the desired results.

Speakers at the seminar, held on the premises of PwC Ghana, discussed other pertinent topics such as publicisat­ion of the migration guidelines and 3rd Party invoicing.

The first in the series of the Quarterly Tax Dialogues was moderated by Abeku GyanQuansa­h, a Tax Partner with PwC Ghana and UKGCC Executive Council Member.

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