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Check out the transactions that will be affected by E-Levy

By Justice Kofi Bimpeh
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Parliament this week passed the E-Levy despite a walkout by the Minority.

The E-levy is a tax imposed on electronic transfers charged at the time of transfer.

The levy, which was amended from 1.75 percent to 1.5 percent, will be a tax on electronic transactions, which includes mobile-money payments.

READ ALSO : I'm happy E-Levy has been passed- Akufo-Addo

The charge will apply to electronic transactions that are more than GH¢100 on a daily basis.

Though the introduction of the Levy has received a lot of controversies, Parliament on March 29, 2022, passed the Electronic Transfer Levy Bill.

Below are a number of electronic transactions that will be affected and those that will be exempted when the implementation kicks in later in May 2022.

Transactions to be covered by E-Levy

According to the Finance Ministry, E-Levy transactions will cover:

Mobile money transfers between accounts on the same electronic money issuer (EMI),
Mobile money transfers from an account on one EMI to a recipient on another EMI,
Transfers from bank accounts to mobile money accounts,
Transfer from mobile money accounts to bank accounts,
Bank transfers on a digital platform which originate from a bank account belonging to an individual to another individual.
Transactions to be exempted:

The Ministry noted that the E-Levy will not apply to:

Cumulative transfers of GHC100 per day made by the same person,
Transfers between accounts owned by the same person
Transfers for the payment of taxes, fees and charges on the Ghana.gov platform,
Electronic clearing of cheques and Specified merchant payments (that is, payments to commercial establishments registered with the GRA for income tax and VAT purposes).
ATM withdrawals are also excluded from the E-levy tax.
The levy shall be administered by the Ghana Revenue Authority, GRA in accordance with the Revenue Administration Act 2016 (ACT 915).

The levy shall be collected by the Ghana Revenue Authority, GRA through licensed Banks, Specialised Deposit-Taking Institutions, Payment Service Providers (PSPS), and Electronic Money Issuers (EMIS).

After collection, the Commissioner-General of the Authority shall pay all amounts collected into the Consolidated Fund.

According to the Ministry of Finance, Government is projecting to get about ¢6.9 billion from the tax on electronic transactions by the end of 2022.