Prime News Ghana

COVID-19 levy will be abolished — Finance Minister

By Vincent Ashitey
Shares
facebook sharing button Share
twitter sharing button Tweet
email sharing button Email
sharethis sharing button Share

The Finance Minister, Cassiel Ato Forson, has assured Ghanaians that the COVID-19 levy will be abolished.

The move forms part of the government’s broader tax relief measures aimed at easing burden on Ghanaians.

The Minister gave this assurance while presenting the mid-year budget review on July 24, 2025.

“The Covid levy will be abolished,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Minority has asked the government not to scrap the Covid levy. They believe the Covid-19 levy will serve as a viable financing option to support the Ghana Medical Trust Fund, otherwise known as ‘Mahama Cares', instead of the government allocating 20 per cent of the National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF) to it.

It said the government’s decision to take 20 per cent from the NHIF would weaken the National Health Insurance Scheme since the Trust Fund would be competing with the scheme for financial resources.

Dr Nana Ayew Afriye, Ranking Member on the Health Committee of Parliament, made the call in an engagement with the Parliamentary Press Corps in Accra on Wednesday. 

Dr Nana Afriye, also the Member of Parliament for Effiduase/Asokore, said even though the National Democratic Congress (NDC) before the 2024 general elections pledged to scrap the law establishing the Covid-19 levy, the NDC, after coming into government, found it useful to earmark the Covid-19 levy towards the Trust Fund.

The Minority Caucus urged the government to apologise to Ghanaians and go ahead to channel the Covid-19 levy towards financing the Trust Fund.

Dr Nana Afriye observed that the Ghana Medical Trust Fund seemed to be an outsourced function of the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA), noting, “If that is what the Trust Fund meant to do, then there must be clarity for Ghanaians to understand where to seek help with the NHIA and where to seek help with the Trust Fund”.

 

The lawmaker also suggested that the government should complete some of the Agenda 111 Hospital Projects and use them as specialist hospitals where sufferers of non-communicable diseases including cancer, diabetes, stroke, asthma and kidney disease could seek treatment.

 

The minister further indicated that all the measures announced in the 2025 budget statement to stabilise the Cedi against the major trading currencies are yielding real results.

“We committed to establishing the Gold bod to support the stability of the Cedi,” he said, adding that these deliberate policies announced in the 2025 budget are yielding results.”

“The Cedi performance in the first half of the year has been impressive,” he stressed while delivering the 2025 mid-year budget in Parliament on Thursday, July 24.