The Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta Hon., announced a new 1.75% e-levy on all electronic transactions in the 2022 budget, sparking a public outcry on social media since last year.
Since then, there has been several debates and public education and reviews on this new electronic levy bill, the government through the Ministry of Finance and the Parliament of Ghana agreed to cut the rate of the E-Levy downwards to 1.50%, which has now been approved and passed by the Parliament Of Ghana.
The new ‘e-LevyorMomo tax‘, according to the Finance Minister, will help the government “widen the tax net and rope in the informal sector”. Meanwhile, a portion of the revenue generated will be used to support entrepreneurship, cyber security, and road infrastructure initiatives.
“After considerable deliberations, the government has decided to place a levy on all electronic transactions to widen the tax net and rope in the informal sector. This shall be known as the ‘Electronic Transaction Levy or e-Levy’.”
“A portion of the proceeds from the E-Levy will be used to support entrepreneurship, youth employment, cyber security, digital and road infrastructure among others, ” he stated.
The E-Levy is a new tax measure that will be applied only to the originator of a transaction on an electronic platform. Electronic platforms include the following: fintech platforms, online banking, and momo platforms.
The E-Levy stood at 1.75 %. However, the revised e levy percentage is now 1.50%. The government will apply a rate of 1.50% on all applicable transactions.
The Momo-tax or e-levy policy is scheduled to start on May 1st, 2022.
The levy will be applied to every transaction above GHS 100 on a daily basis. That is, after every GHS 100(cumulative spend) in a day the e-levy will be applied. For example, if Kofi sends GHS 50 to his sister in the morning and sends another GHS 50(totaling GHS 100) to his brother in the afternoon, he will not pay the E-levy. However, any other payment after this threshold will attract the e-levy. That being said, everyone is given a Tax-free amount of 100gh every day.
E-Levy affects Mobile money transfers done between accounts on the same MOMO network(MTN-MTN, VODA-VODA, AIRTELTIGO-AIRTELTIGO). Mobile money transfers from an account on one network to another network(MTN-VODA or AIRTELTIGO transfers). Transfers from bank accounts to mobile money accounts. Transfers from mobile money account to bank accounts.
Transfer between accounts owned by the same person: if you are sending money to your own account (i.e., of the same person) then you will not be charged the E- Levy. A transfer from Kojo’s Tigo wallet to his MTN wallet or from his CBG bank account to his CB bank account or from his savings account to his current or investment account, will not attract the levy. Transfers between momo merchants(agents & super agents), Transfers for payment of Taxes. Electronic clearing of cheques.
According to the Minister, every Ghanaian is expected to pay aGHS 1.50chargeon all transactions aboveGHS 100. AGHS 15.0charge on all transactionsaboveGHS 1000. And aGHS 150.0charge on all transactionsaboveGHS 10,000and so on. Mobile money payments, bank transfers, merchant payments, and inward remittances are all examples of electronic transactions that will be taxed.
He did, however, clarify that any transactionunder GHS 100in a day is zero-rated and incurs no additional fees.
According to the minister, the1.5% e-levywill be paid by thesenderon all mobile money payments, bank transfers, and merchant payments. If Kofi wants to send Ama money, then only Kofi will pay E-Levy.
No, the payment of taxes, etc. on Ghana.Gov does not incur the E-levy.
Yes. Once the payment is made from a mobile money account, bank account, or through a merchant payment platform; and exceeds the GHS 100 daily threshold the levy is payable.
No, According to the GRA, the e-levy does not affect Mobile money withdrawal or cash out.
No, Cash-in into an individual’s own wallet will not be subject to the E-Levy. This means anytime you want to put money in your momo wallet, you won’t pay the momo tax.
No, E-Levy will not be charged on investment accounts
Your e-Levy money will be reversed back to you as and when the reversal has been completed
No, foreign remittances like Western Union, ZeePay, Unity Link, Ria, Tap Tap Send, etc. are not subject to E-Levy
No, Mobile money merchants fall in the principals, master-agents, and agents categories, therefore transfers they make will not be subject to e-Levy.
Prior to the announcement of the 2022 budget, theGhanaian governmentwas looking for long-term revenue sources to complete the country’s inadequate road development projects.
The discussion was how much revenue theroad tolls were bringingto the state and the need to increase such revenues to cover the road infrastructure deficit in the country.
What are the e-levy chart and charges on Momo?
Below are the new e-levy Charges list on Mobile money (MOMO) in Ghana. This is calculated based on the revised fees from the Telco to reduce their charges by 25%.
MOMO Amount you are sending | Telco’s 0.75% charge | E-levy charges of 1.5% | Total Charges (e-Levy+ Telco charge) | New MOMO Amount to pay |
---|---|---|---|---|
GH₵ 100 | GHp 0.75 | GH₵ 0.00 | GHp 0.75p | GH₵ 100.75 |
GH₵ 150 | GH₵ 1.125 | GH₵ 2.25 | GH₵ 3.38 | GH₵ 153.38 |
GH₵ 300 | GH₵ 2.25 | GH₵ 4.50 | GH₵ 6.75 | GH₵ 306.75 |
GH₵ 500 | GH₵ 3.75 | GH₵ 7.50 | GH₵ 11.25 | GH₵ 511.25 |
GH₵ 650 | GH₵ 4.87 | GH₵ 9.75 | GH₵ 14.62 | GH₵ 664.62 |
GH₵ 800 | GH₵ 6.00 | GH₵ 14.00 | GH₵ 20.00 | GH₵ 820.00 |
GH₵ 1000 | GH₵ 7.50 | GH₵ 15.00 | GH₵ 22.50 | GH₵ 1,022.5 |
GH₵ 2000 | GH₵ 15.00 | GH₵ 30.00 | GH₵ 45.00 | GH₵ 2,045.0 |
GH₵ 3000 | GH₵ 22.50 | GH₵ 45.00 | GH₵ 67.50 | GH₵ 3,067.5 |
GH₵ 5000 | GH₵ 37.50 | GH₵ 75.00 | GH₵ 112.50 | GH₵ 5,112.5 |
GH₵ 7000 | GH₵ 52.50 | GH₵ 105.00 | GH₵ 157.50 | GH₵ 7,157.5 |
GH₵ 9000 | GH₵ 67.50 | GH₵ 135.00 | GH₵ 202.50 | GH₵ 9,202.5 |
GH₵ 10,000 | GH₵ 75.00 | GH₵ 175.00 | GH₵ 250.00 | GH₵ 10,250.0 |
Meanwhile, according to the minister,electronic transactions in 2020was estimated to be over GHS 500 billion compared to the GH¢78 billion in 2016.
A 1.5% elevy on all electronic transactions is estimated to be about GHS 6.9 billion, which is enough to cover for road deficit in the country.
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