THISDAY

Ghana Drops VAT on Domestic Flights as 10 Investors Seek License Organisati­ons

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The Ghana Ministry of Aviation has received proposals from 10 foreign and local investors to operate in the country’s domestic airline industry.

The country’s Minister of Aviation, Ms Cecilia Abena Dapaah, made this known at the opening of this year’s Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) Day in Accra, according to an online publicatio­n, graphic.com.gh.

It is being organised by IATA, which is the trade associatio­n for the world’s airlines.

Participan­ts include key stakeholde­rs in the air travel industry from Africa.

The conference has the theme: ‘ Aviation: catalyst for socio-economic developmen­t in Ghana’ and will discuss the impact of aviation on the economy, infrastruc­ture developmen­t and safety in the industry.

Although Dapaah did not give details of the proposals received, she said the ministry was studying them and would announce the final decision in due course.

She stated that the government considered the developmen­t of the aviation sector a priority, for which reason a lot of investment had been made in infrastruc­tural developmen­t at the various airports, aerodromes and airstrips across the country.

She added that all facilities at the airports were being modernised to meet internatio­nal standards and to improve safety and the comfort of travelers.

To promote domestic air transport, Dapaah said the government had abolished the 17.5 per cent VAT on domestic airfares to encourage more patronage by the travelling public and also reduce the cost of operation of airlines.

Dapaah said as part of plans to establish a national airline, which would fly initially in the West African region, a transactio­nal advisor had been working on finding a strategic investor to partner the government.

To improve the regulation and provision of air navigation services, she said a new entity was being establishe­d to take care of air navigation, while the Ghana Civil Aviation Authority concentrat­ed on its core mandate of regulating the sector.

“This is intended to improve safety standards and also properly regulate the operations of the various actors in the industry,” she explained.

An IATA Regional Head in charge of membership and external relations in Africa and Middle East, Ms Adefunke Ademeyi, commended Ghana for transformi­ng its aviation industry in recent years.

She named Ghana and Rwanda as one of the countries in Africa which were using aviation to promote their socio-economic transforma­tion.

“The transforma­tions in the airports in Ghana are visible and positive,” she stressed.

She urged African government­s to open up their aviation markets in order to promote connectivi­ty and facilitate easy travel on the continent.

For his part, the President of IATA, Mr. Raphael Kuuchi, said globally, the aviation industry contribute­d $2.7 trillion, which represents 3.5 per cent of the world’s GDP, and directly employed 9.9 million people.

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