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Malls are a ready market for made-in-Ghana products – Kofi Sekyere

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Mr. Kofi Sekyere, Chairman of Kumasi City Mall, has said it is about time Ghanaians saw shopping malls as potential markets for locally produced and manufactured goods to enable retail shopping facilities to contribute towards the country’s import substitution strategy.

Mr. Sekyere made this observation when the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, jointly opened the US$95 million Kumasi City Mall in the Ashanti Regional capital Wednesday.

“In economic term, these facilities (shopping malls) serve as ready-markets for locally produced and manufactured goods and can therefore contribute substantially towards our country’s import substitution strategy,” Mr. Sekyere said in his welcome address.

Citing the wide range of agricultural produce stocked by the malls as ready markets waiting to be exploited, Mr. Sekyere urged local farmers, entrepreneurs and the entire business community to begin positioning themselves to take advantage of the many opportunities the advent of malls have brought.

He said Ghana’s import bill could be reduced considerably if even half of the produce offered in the various malls were supplied locally, stressing that the availability of such markets can be a major boost to the government’s innovative One-District -One-Factory agenda.

“It is my vision that, with time, our malls will be majority populated by local businesses and stocked with Ghanaian manufactured products. I’m convinced that this small private investment could be the beginning of the revival of Kumasi’s and indeed Ghana’s manufacturing base, especially as the number of malls increase over time.

The President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo re-echoed the same sentiments as he decried the tendency for supermarkets and malls to trade in imported goods at the expense of locally made products.

As the president commended Delico Kumasi Limited for delivering an imposing business infrastructure to the city of Kumasi, he charged retail facilities in the country to sell local goods as a way of promoting Ghanaian industries and entreated the management of Kumasi City Mall to lead the way by ensuring that at least 20% of products on offer in the mall are made in Ghana.

President Akufo-Addo and Otumfuo Osei Tutu II jointly unveiled a monument which dedicated and christened Kumasi City Mall’s imposing Food Court to the late Queenmother of Ashanti and mother of the Asantehene, Nana Afia Serwaa Kobi Ampem II.

Source: thebftonline.com/Ghana

Nana Addo takes malls to task over low sale of local products

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President Nana Akufo-Addo has expressed worry over the influx of cheap imported goods in most shopping malls and supermarkets in the country, to the disadvantage of locally produced goods, which constitute less than five percent of goods on sale.

The development, the president said at the opening of the Kumasi City Mall, weakens local producers while also deepening the low patronage of made in Ghana products.

President Akufo-Addo said: “We cannot create the hundreds of thousands of jobs for the masses of our young people if the sustenance of our economy is import dependent and import driven as well as being dependent on raw material exports.”

He insisted that the malls increase their intake of locally made products to be in line with government’s economic programme of adding value to raw materials in the process of rapid industrialisation.

He asked the owners and operators to pay attention to the low sale of locally produced goods increase the percentage sold, and engage local producers and entrepreneurs, including farmers.

Initiatives introduced in the budget, the president said, are aimed at stimulating private sector activities and shifting the focus of the economy from taxation to production, and urged the private sector to take advantage of this new focus which is offering opportunities to local ingenuity and production.

He said new enterprises, such as malls, the world over, have sparked the creation of jobs and investments and have also led to increased local spending.

The president also charged the youth to take advantage of the opportunities with the establishment of the Mall, as well as the government’s ‘Planting for Food and Jobs’ initiative, which was launched recently.

“Organise yourselves and get involved in this initiative. I am certain that my admonishing to shop owners of this mall will not go unheard, they will surely buy from you if your produce meet the standards, which I am confident it can,” he stated.

The Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Kumasi City Mall, Mr. Kofi Sekyere, said the mall is the third straight shopping centre development that have undertaken following the Achimota West Hills Malls.

He disclosed that a whopping US$250 million have been invested in these projects, of which the Kumasi Mall accounts for about 40 percent of the investment, at the cost of US$95 million.

The establishment of the KCM, he said, is a repackaging of the old marketplace to meet the needs and demands of a 21st century Kumasi, given the entrepreneurial nature of the people in the city.

The Kumasi City Mall comes with a trading space of 18,500 square metres within a total land area of 15.43 acres, and has the potential to be expanded up to 28,000sq metres.

The mall has 1,250 car parking bays, with what is now known to be the biggest basement parking facility in the country.

Source: Kizito Cudjoe/thebftonline.com/Ghana

Eva Mends appointed first female director of budget

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Ms. Eva Mends, a Chief Economics Officer has been appointed as the Acting Director of Budget at the Ministry of Finance,the first ever female to be appointed a Director of Budget at the Ministry.

Ms.  Mends, the Group Head of the Public Financial Management Reforms, joined the Ministry as a National Service Person in 1991. Positions she has held include, Head of The Americas Desk in 1998, Head of Budget Development in 2006 and Group Head of Public Financial Management (PFM) reforms in 2013.

As Group Head, she was instrumental in leading major reforms that include gender responsive budgeting, Programme Based Budgeting and lately the development of the new Public Financial Management Act.

She is an alumni of University of Ghana, where she studied Political Science with Economics and also has an Executive Masters in Public Administration from GIMPA. She has undertaken short courses at the Harvard and Duke Universities. She takes over from Mr. Sampson Asare Fianko, who reverts  to his former position as a Deputy Controller and Accountant General.

Other appointments include Mr. Eugene Asante Ofosuhene, as the Acting Controller and Accountant General.   Mr. David Klotey Collison, a Chief Budget Analyst and Mr. Sampson Akligoh, a Technical Advisor to the Minister of Finance have also been appointed Director of Public Investment Division and Financial Sector Division of the Ministry respectively.

Mr. Ofosuhene comes to this position with a wealth of experience. As a former Deputy Controller and Accountant General, he was responsible for management of the Government Treasury.

He acted creditably on several occasions as the Controller and Accountant General in the absence of the substantive Controller. He is a Public Finance Expert and has Consulted for the World Bank on the assignment, ‘Strengthening the role of Public Private Partnerships in the Local Government Assemblies’.

Mr. Ofosuhene is a Fellow of The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (U.K. & Ireland) F.C.C.A and Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICA) Ghana. He has a Master’s degree in Business Administration (Finance option) from the University of Ghana. He is also a graduate of the London School of Accountancy. He takes over from Mr. Seidu Kotomah, Controller and Accountant General, who has been reassigned to the Ministry of Finance.

Mr. Collison joined the Civil Service as an Assistant Budget Analyst at the Ministry of Finance in December, 1995. Until his recent appointment as Director in charge of Public Investment, he was the Group Head, Budget Development and was responsible for Compensations Management and Coordination of the National Budget Development Process from February, 2015.

Mr. Collison graduated with a BSc (Hons) degree in Agriculture, majoring in Agricultural Economics from the University of Ghana in 1993 and also has a Master’s in Business Administration (Finance option) from the same university in 2001.

Mr.  Akligoh, has over 10 years’ working experience in the financial services industry working in advisory, asset management and as an economist.

Until his appointment to the Ministry, he was the Managing Director of InvestCorp, a financial services firm in Accra, Ghana.  He served as a Vice President at Databank where he was Head of Research and a Fixed Income Strategist.

He also worked at SIC Financial Services Limited and with ADC African Development Corporation AG in Frankfurt which was acquired by Atlas Mara in 2014. 13.            Mr. Akligoh also served as an Adjunct Lecturer in International Economics at Ashesi University College in 2014.

He holds a BA in Economics and Law (First Class Honours) from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology in Ghana, and a Master’s degree in Economic Policy and Corporate Strategy from the Maastricht School of Management in the Netherlands.

Source: thebftonline.com l Ghana

Dun&Bradstrest signs MOU with Invest In Africa to support SMEs

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Dun&Bradstreet(D&B) Ghana and Invest In Africa, IIA, have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), to support small and medium scale enterprises(SMEs) to make them investor ready through credit referencing.

With the signing of the MOU, it is expected that IIA and D&B will support SMEs on the African Partner Pool (APP) by; providing Information from D&B on the best way to manage books in order to easily access investment and finance, providing consent for D & B to conduct a credit report for SMEs, and share it with potential investors and partners.

D & B will  also be the exclusive Credit Information Reporting Company through which all foreign companies seeking  to do business with local companies on the APP can obtain a business profile report or credit information report

IIA, a cross-sector partnership of companies with the vision to create thriving African economies, has been set up to give businesses access to skills, finance and new markets. This is done through its key initiatives the African Partner Pool (APP) an online business platform that connects international companies to quality validated local businesses. www.africanpartnerpool.com.

Another initiative of Invest In Africa is the Business Excellence Programme, a combined Development Partners & Private Sector funded programme with the aim of building businesses to become more competitive.

Dun & Bradstreet is the leading provider of business information for risk management, sales & marketing, supply management and risk consulting decisions worldwide.

Signing the MOU, Adebowale Atobatele(D&B Ghana Country Manager)said: “We are excited about our partnership with Invest in Africa. It forms a core part of our objective in Ghana which is to create and deliver superior value to all stakeholders.  Our partnership with Invest in Africa (Ghana) will help boost the confidence of investors in Ghanaian businesses‎ while at the same time help local business and their owners develop the right profile to attract the right type of investments or financing that they require to grow their business.”

The APP Manager, Ibrahima Aminu stated that, ‘’this is one of the initiatives IIA is taking to prepare SMEs for access to finance, the agreement with D&B will be of immense value to the SMEs on the APP as it will assist the SMEs on the APP to understand the requirements of financial institutions in applying for access to finance’’.

Dun & Bradstreet joins the cross-sector group of partners that IIA is currently working with which includes Newmont Mining, Tullow Ghana, AB & David Law, GE, Millennium Development Authority (MiDA), Ecobank, UT Bank, Guinness Ghana, EY, GIPC, Modec Ghana, Societe Generale, AGI, GIPC.

Source: thebftonline.com/Ghana

Gov’t takes bold step on local procurement

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Government will soon introduce a procurement policy that will bond its agencies and large companies operating in the country to source majority of their raw materials and inputs from local producers once such inputs are available, Carlos Kingsley Ahenkorah, a Deputy Trade and Industry Minister, has said.

“The policy will also mandate foreigners in the retail business to dedicate at least four shelves to stock only locally-made products.

This is one way we can ensure that Ghana-made goods get the prominence in our malls to increase patronage and consumption,” he told journalists on the sidelines of a tour of the fresh fruits and vegetables supplier, Eden Tree Limited, in Accra.

According to Mr. Ahenkorah, government, by these interventions, wants to ensure that farmers and manufacturers across the country get ready market for their produce to curtail food wastage and to aid job creation.

“For instance, if we have a company like Eden Tree whose products meet safety and quality standards operating in the country, why should hoteliers and large catering companies import onions and tomatoes from other countries?” he queried.

The minister’s comments parallelsuggestions from procurement experts on the need for a national procurement strategy or policy that will push local buying.

President of the Ghana Institute of Procurement and Supply (GIPS), Collins Agyemang, told the B&FT in January that: “Getting people to buy locally is about the mindset and changing that mindset should be backed by policies and strategies.

The success of the Akufo-Addo-led government’s “One district, One factory” initiative, for instance, hinges largely on such an intervention given that Ghanaians have developed a high taste for foreign goods.”

According to the deputy minister, government’s strategic plan is to improve the country’s domestic trade by engaging the private sector to establish retail infrastructure at the various regional capitals.

It is also to establish an industrial sub-contracting exchange that will match the needs of large industries with outputs from small and medium sized enterprises.

“There is the need for agriculture sector actors to, as a matter of urgency, improve their production capacity,” he said, while encouraging the youth to take advantage of the government’s “Planting for Food and Jobs” initiative.

The visit to Eden Tree Limited afforded the minister the opportunity to ascertain the needs of the fresh fruits, herbs and vegetables supplier and how the trade ministry could provide the requisite support to make the company and others of its kind more productive.

Eden Tree Limited is a Ghanaian-owned market leader in the agro-processing of packaged fresh fruits, herbs, and vegetables, with the aim to create a brand profile and a corporate culture of quality in the food service industry.

It also seeks to promote healthy eating habits in the country by producing, packaging, and supplying high quality vegetables, fruits, and herbs to the Ghanaian market as well as contribute strongly to job creation.

Source: Patrick Paintsil/thebftonline.com/Ghana

Hike in transport fares pushes inflation up to 13%

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The 15 percent increment in transport fares by the GPRTU in April has pushed inflation up slightly to 13 percent from 12.8 percent in March, the Ghana Statistical Service has announced.

“The rise in inflation rate from 12.8 in March to 13 percent in April 2017 was mainly due to the rise in inflation rate for the transport group,” Government Statistician, Baah Wadieh, told a press conference yesterday.

“It went up by 9.6 percentage points. We have communications also inching up slightly by 0.1 percentage point and miscellaneous goods went up by 0.1 percentage point. So, these are what accounted for the rise in the inflation rate.”

The monthly change rate for April 2017 was 1.6percent compared to the 1.3percent recorded for March 2017.

Analysis of the figures shows that the non-food group recorded a year-on-year inflation rate of 16.3 percent in April compared to 15.6 percent in March. Five subgroups recorded year-on-year rates higher than the group’s average.

Transport topped with a rate of 24.9 percent, followed by recreation and culture with 22.3 percent, whilst furnishing, household equipment and routine maintenance also recorded 21.9 percent.

The food and non-alcoholic beverage group also recorded a year-on-year inflation rate of 6.7 percent, a 0.6 percentage point higher than the March rate.

The main price drivers for the food group were fish and sea food, which recorded 13.6 percent; meat and meat products also recorded 10.9 percent, and coffee, tea and cocoa recorded 7.2 percent.

The year-on-year inflation rate for imported items also hit 15 percent, 2.8 percentage points higher than that of locally produced items of 12.2 percent.

Commenting on how this impacts the economy, President of the Institute of Chartered Economists, Daniel Anim-Prempeh, said any effects will be marginal, although he argued managers of the economy to be on the alert.

“The very moment it was announced that transport fares had been increased, it was expected that inflation will go up. What it means is that there is the likelihood that the prices of basic commodities will be increased since the transportation component is factored in pricing. However, the impact is going to be mild.

It is a clear signal for managers of the economy to open their eyes and put in measures that will ensure that at the end of the day inflation is at an appreciable level,” Mr. Anim-Prempeh told the B&FT in an interview.

Source: Obed Attah Yeboah/thebftonline.com/Ghana

Ministry of Finance announces fresh appointments

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The Ministry of Finance has appointed new officers to key positions in the Ministry in a bid to help push the reforms the government intends to pursue.

Overall four persons have been appointed to augment the work at the Ministry, including Ms Eva Mends, Eugene Asante Ofosuhene, Sampson Akligoh and David Klotey Collison to respective positions.

According to a press statement copied to the B&FT, the appointment of Ms. Eva Mends, a Chief Economics Officer as the Acting Director of Budget, is the first time a female has been appointed to the position of Director of Budget at the Ministry.

Eugene Asante Ofosuhene, on the other hand is the new Acting Controller and Accountant General.

In addition, Mr. David Klotey Collison, a Chief Budget Analyst and Mr. Sampson Akligoh, a Technical Advisor to the Minister of Finance have also been appointed Director of Public Investment Division and Financial Sector Division of the Ministry respectively.

Ms. Eva Mends, the Group Head of the Public Financial Management Reforms, joined the Ministry as a National Service Person in 1991. Positions she has held include, Head of The Americas Desk in 1998, Head of Budget Development in 2006 and Group Head of Public Financial Management (PFM) reforms in 2013.

As Group Head, she was instrumental in leading major reforms that include gender responsive budgeting, Programme Based Budgeting and lately the development of the new Public Financial Management Act.

She is an alumni of University of Ghana, where she studied Political Science with Economics and also has an Executive Masters in Public Administration from GIMPA. She has undertaken short courses at the Harvard and Duke Universities. She takes over from Mr. Sampson Asare Fianko, who reverts back to his former position as a Deputy Controller and Accountant General.

Mr. Ofosuhene comes to this position with a wealth of experience. As a former Deputy Controller and Accountant General, he was responsible for management of the Government Treasury.

He acted creditably on several occasions as the Controller and Accountant General in the absence of the substantive Controller. He is a Public Finance Expert and has Consulted for the World Bank on the assignment, ‘Strengthening the role of Public Private Partnerships in the Local Government Assemblies’.

Mr. Ofosuhene is a Fellow of The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (U.K. & Ireland) F.C.C.A and Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICA) Ghana. He has a Master’s degree in Business Administration (Finance option) from the University of Ghana. He is also a graduate of the London School of Accountancy. He takes over from Mr. Seidu Kotomah, Controller and Accountant General, who has been reassigned to the Ministry of Finance.

Mr. David Klotey Collison joined the Civil Service as an Assistant Budget Analyst at the Ministry of Finance in December, 1995. Until his recent appointment as Director in charge of Public Investment, he was the Group Head, Budget Development and was responsible for Compensations Management and Coordination of the National Budget Development Process from February, 2015.

Mr. Collison graduated with a BSc (Hons) degree in Agriculture, majoring in Agricultural Economics from the University of Ghana in 1993 and also has a Master’s in Business Administration (Finance option) from the same university in 2001.

Mr. Sampson Akligoh, has over 10 years’ working experience in the financial services industry working in advisory, asset management and as an economist.

Until his appointment to the Ministry, he was the Managing Director of InvestCorp, a financial services firm in Accra, Ghana.  He served as a Vice President at Databank where he was Head of Research and a Fixed Income Strategist.

He also worked at SIC Financial Services Limited and with ADC African Development Corporation AG in Frankfurt which was acquired by Atlas Mara in 2014. 13.     Mr. Akligoh also served as an Adjunct Lecturer in International Economics at Ashesi University College in 2014.

He holds a BA in Economics and Law (First Class Honours) from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology in Ghana, and a Master’s degree in Economic Policy and Corporate Strategy from the Maastricht School of Management in the Netherlands.

Source: thebftonline.com/Ghana

Gov’t needs nurses, with or without bond – medical association

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Government must, as a matter of priority, be committed to employing the right number of qualified nurses into public health facilities, regardless of whether the bonding arrangement it has with trainee nurses is revoked, Dr. Justice Yankson, Deputy General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association has said.

More hands, he said in an an interview with the B&FT, are needed on board to deal with personnel shortfalls at health facilities across the country.

Revoking the bonding arrangement, he added, will not, on its own, reduce the number of nurses the country needs because they may shun working in the public sector.

“Why should that bring down the number of nurses? The only thing that will bring down the number of nurses is government deciding not to employ. The bond doesn’t do anything. It is about the commitment of the employer. If you have a bond and you as an employer, you are treating your people well, people outside will even leave their employment and come to you.

If you sign a bond with them and you need the numbers, then employ them. If you don’t sign a bond with them and you need the numbers, those who are in the system, you employ them.

So personally, I don’t think it is about bond or no bond, but it is more for me to do with the ability of the employer to employ the right numbers of people who are needed, because even though the bond is there, from our history and recent times, with or without the bond, they are sitting home,” he said.

Deputy Health Minister, Tina Mensah, last month announced government’s intention to take pressure off its back by cancelling the bonding arrangement it has with trainee nurses which meant the nurses had to work for government for a compulsory period after school. This also implied the government had to automatically provide them jobs once they left school.

The government has, however, had a torrid time over the years trying to put the large number of trained nurses on its already stretched payroll.

Over 900 unposted midwives and psychiatric nurses recently staged a protest at the premises of the Health Ministry, demanding that they be given jobs forthwith.

They accused government of playing politics with their recruitment, making reference to Vice President Bawumia’s claim that all nurses awaiting financial clearance had been cleared and posted within their first 100 days of the NPP administration.

Source: Rashidatu Ibrahim l thebftonline.com l Ghana

All on board: Integrating SMEs into mainstream economy

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“The Mystery of Capital”, a book written by the Peruvian Economist Hernando De Soto, immediately comes to mind anytime one considers Ghana’s fiscal situation. This book examines the importance of the extralegal sector to the economy. The extralegal sector is made up of assets, properties and businesses that fall outside the legal or formalized record systems, restricting the use of these assets in the creation and expansion of capital. This classic book stresses how lack of representations – processes to represent assets and create capital – has led to many third world economies being undervalued. According to De Soto (2000), the inability of developing countries to fully integrate extralegal sections of society into the mainstream economy is central to addressing the problem of value creation that has longed plagued many developing countries.

In Ghana, the extralegal sector can be likened to the informal sector where most Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) are found. Over the past two decades, successive Governments have recognized the need to integrate the informal sector into our legal and formal systems. The advantage of having such a system is that it makes information readily available, facilitates trade and supports effective planning and policy implementation. Now more than ever, Government and other stakeholders would need to find a way to document the activities of SMEs in a manner that ensures a win for all parties. The recurring revenue shortfall situation, pressing need for massive capital infrastructure projects, unemployment, low economic growth rates and the uncertainty related to over-reliance on export commodities to drive long-term growth are some of the reasons that make it imperative for Government to consider alternative (and perhaps more aggressive) programs that will provide the right incentives for the integration of informal sector businesses into the formal economy, if we are to succeed in our efforts at creating value and further diversifying the Ghanaian economy.

SMEs are the real engine of growth

There is no dispute surrounding the assertion that the private sector is and will increasingly become the propeller of economic growth in any modern society, especially as government budgets become inadequate for the many emerging economic and social needs of its citizens. It is also very well documented that SMEs contribute significantly to employment in developed countries and regions. SMEs create new jobs, expand the tax base and are drivers of innovation. Depending on the jurisdiction in question, SMEs are defined based on the number of employees, turnover or the size of business’ balance sheet. Countries and regions such as the United States of America, China, Japan, Malaysia, Korea and the Eurozone benefit enormously from SMEs. According to the European Union (EU)1, SMEs represent 99% of all enterprises in Europe. In the past five years, they have created around 85% of new jobs and provided two-thirds of the total private sector employment in the EU. The European Commission considers SMEs and entrepreneurship as key to ensuring economic growth, innovation, job creation, and social integration in the EU.

 

 

Ghana’s 2010 Population and Housing Census (PHC)

According to the PHC conducted in 2010, 64.8% of economically active persons in Ghana were self-employed. Also, females are slightly more likely to be self-employed than males. The census confirmed

the already accepted belief that the private sector is the largest employer in Ghana. The private informal sector accounts for 86.1% of total employment in Ghana, with the private formal sector contributing 7.0% (See chart). The public sector accounts for 6.3% of total employment while semi-public, parastatal and others account for the rest. Even though these are not current figures, the freeze on public sector employment since 2010 may imply an even bigger magnitude of private sector jobs, both formal and informal.

Ghana’s Fiscal Imbalance and the problem with low hanging fruit

The 2017 Budget Statement puts Ghana’s fiscal deficit for 2016 at 8.7% of GDP as against a target of 5.3% on a cash basis. After the fiscal deficit rose to 11.8% in 2012, Government made attempts to reduce the deficit situation mainly by ramping up revenue mobilization efforts and managing public expenditure. Unfortunately, the situation in Ghana is that rather than aggressively growing the revenue base in a manner that maximizes productivity and discourages tax evasion, a heavier tax burden falls on large firms and the small proportion of the citizenry employed in the formal private and public sectors.

One would argue that if the earnings of certain individuals and companies provide easy targets for tax authorities, we should increase taxes in those areas. The problem that would create, and indeed has been creating in Ghana, is quite obvious. The current situation in this country is that new and higher tax rates are levied on the same “obedient” tax payers, mostly in the formal sector, who face reduced disposable incomes. Increasing corporate taxes is another easy alternative, but again that provides the incentives for large firms to find innovative ways of avoiding taxes. In an increasingly globalized world, multinationals continue to find new territories to conduct business in cheaper ways and if a country’s tax regime is considered unfavorable, such firms are likely to move away from or maintain a limited presence in high tax regimes. It is important for governments and tax authorities to know the optimal level of tax for individuals and firms beyond which any increases in taxes would be counterproductive.

Widening the tax net is the most sustainable way of ensuring that Government mobilizes enough revenue in the current and future periods. It appears to be a herculean task, but it is possible for Government to formalize and properly document the operations of businessmen and businesswomen who deal in tiles, upholstery, medical products, agricultural products, spare parts, second-hand clothing and meat products among others. Government and the private sector can adopt a strategy that has far reaching benefits beyond just tax mobilization, to develop integrated markets, support business expansion, job and wealth creation and boost economic growth.

What can be done?

Gather data on all businesses

First of all, there is no way to come up with a proper plan to help develop the efficiency and capacity of SMEs without gathering relevant data in relation to those businesses. As a starting point, all businesses that generate monthly income beyond a certain threshold say, GH¢1,000 must be compelled to provide information about their business – ownership, location and cash flows among others. As Mr. De Soto pointed out, without an implicit legal infrastructure backed by accurate data and representations that assigns rights to assets, it is practically impossible to have a functionally integrated economy that is able to create capital and facilitate trade beyond narrow local circles.

Provide Incentives

From previous experiences, the average Ghanaian would not readily volunteer information pertaining to his or her business. To deal with this challenge, Government and its partners must provide the right incentives that will make it worthwhile for business owners to willingly volunteer and provide basic details about their businesses. The incentives can include the provision of book-keeping and professional services free of charge for the micro business and charging a reasonably low fee for the same services that is provided for SMEs. The Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) 2 recognizes the fact that many businesses do not keep proper books of accounts. An intervention that requires businesses to integrate into a wider economy in exchange for services that will make SMEs more efficient and profitable is appropriate. The spin-off effects of ensuring that all businesses at the very least prepare ledgers and trial balances, and in more sophisticated cases income statements, balance sheets and cash flow statements, provide significant benefits to the SMEs themselves. Such businesses will have improved access to cheaper loans, especially if they have predictable cash flows, and assets belonging to the business are documented and fungible. With more businesses having traceable assets and well-documented operating histories, lending rates in the general economy are likely to drop in line with a reduction in SME lending risk.

Create Jobs and Career Opportunities

Who is going to provide the professional and book-keeping services for the many informal businesses throughout the country? How will these people be compensated? How sustainable will such an intervention be? These are legitimate questions, and the answer lies in a scheme that many argue has outlived its usefulness – the National Service Scheme. There are many young Ghanaians today who study business related and accounting courses. Many of such students graduate yearly and are enrolled on the National Service Scheme. Unfortunately, these graduates are posted to assist in areas where their skills are not adequately utilized. A deliberate attempt to use business graduates for this SME capacity building program will ensure sustainability of this program since it provides a constant pool of trained individuals to help gather information, document business processes and prepare books of accounts for SMEs. These graduates will effectively be launching a career in a specialized area that will enhance their future job prospects and enable them learn on-the-job. The Government and the Institute of Chartered Accountants Ghana could offer a short 3-week training program for the graduates who are to facilitate the implementation of this program and award Certificates in SME accounting to them, which would be a good incentive for the best students to volunteer to join. These graduates would of course earn monthly stipends in the form of NSS allowances.

Ensure businesses comply

Ghana is said to be a country that has all the right laws. For such a comprehensive integrated program to work, Government will have to be active in ensuring compliance through, among others, random inspections and checks to enforce existing legislation that requires registration of businesses; penal charges on businesses that fail to provide the required details; and special identification that facilitates provision of financial assistance, credit and other professional services from Government and its financial partners to qualified SMEs.

The cost of non-compliance must be high. For instance, if failure to comply with such a directive means that businesses that import goods cannot clear them at the ports, the incentives for compliance would have been established. Ensuring that all other businesses comply with same directives will curb any potential shortage of essential goods. Therefore, Government will have to go beyond the measures mentioned above and actually compel businesses to comply in a manner that will encourage others to do same. If through association and compliance with this elaborate Government program, an agro-processor in Ghana can export his/her produce to meet growing demand in the sub-region because of access to cheaper funding and support at the ports in getting goods to their final destination, there is a great likelihood that many other businesses will attempt to replicate this success. The testimony of business owners that have benefited from the program provide a stronger case for compliance than any Government action.

Other benefits

This program would lead to a deepening of the entire SME business value and ensure financial inclusion. Accounting firms and banks would create SME desks to provide parallel services aside from the basic book-keeping services. Government will provide through the National Service Scheme. SME financing would likely improve and investors would have adequate assurance to move their funds into this sector which has been described as very risky. This, in itself, will help better allocate the resources of the country as market forces determine the most efficient businesses even within the broad SME value chain. Ghana is likely to secure funding and technical assistance for this program since it is aligned with the goals of many of the developmental agencies operating in the country.

Government can facilitate trade in Ghana among local SME business owners by organizing trade fairs for specific products and services at ideal locations. For local business owners who are compliant and have potential to scale up, Government can support them in visa applications to attend international trade fairs and help resolve other issues that may hinder entry of local businesses into the international markets.

Government can again provide preferential treatment for complaint businesses when it comes to clearing goods at the ports and also provide publicity for complaint businesses using the humongous state resources at its disposal – the GIPC, brand Ghana office and other “pro-Ghana” trade and investment offices can champion this.

A simple online portal can be created that will link buyers and sellers, more like what is done on tonaton.com or olx.com. This can help track trade volumes as orders and payments will be made online, further improving data collection, deepening financial inclusion and convenience of business transactions.

As a revenue generation measure, Government could publish reports, journals and magazines on SMEs for use by investors. Currently, information on say the vehicle repair business at Suame Magazine is fragmented and sometimes plainly inaccurate. With people on the ground who touch base and understand all facets of key businesses and document their activities thereof, accurate information would become available.

Ethical Consumerism is a concept that advocates for purchase of goods and services that have positive social and environmental impacts and shunning products and services that are considered to have a negative impact on society. If as a country we all commit ourselves to such a program and commit to making purchases from businesses that are compliant to this initiative, remarkable gains would be made.

What is being done?

Some of the ideas put forward in this piece are being implemented at one level or another, albeit not in a cohesive and focused manner. Also, because there is little ambition for inclusion and integration of the extralegal sector into the mainstream economy, the successes have not even been evaluated. This Government has decided, as a matter of priority, to revive the National Identification Scheme in order to rope in the economically active but undocumented citizens and the informal sector of the economy, thereby broadening the tax base and accelerating financial inclusion. This forms part of a broader drive by the Government to facilitate financial inclusion at all levels in order to ensure economic growth, poverty reduction and job creation. Government’s decision to roll-out a national digital addressing system to provide unique addresses for all properties in Ghana would also be useful in assigning property rights and further broadening the tax base by identifying the entities on whom the property tax incidence should fall. These measures could prove to be the game-changers that would lead to the better representations Mr. de Soto writes about in order to create value through a more cohesive, legally enforceable and economically efficient property rights and trading system.

 

Conclusion

This policy would be a comprehensive and sustainable approach to addressing the problems of revenue shortfalls, unemployment, low financial intermediation and inadequate data on businesses. We can learn from Europe where the EU takes direct and specific initiatives in creating business friendly environments, promoting entrepreneurship, ensuring inter-connection, facilitating access to finance, providing general support services, and ensuring competitiveness and innovation. We need to get this right.

References

1https://ec.europa.eu/growth/smes_en

2http://www.ghananewsagency.org/economics-revenue-authority-encourages-taxpayers-to-re-register-91622

https://yendieu.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/the-mystery-of-capital.pdf

The writer is a Research Analyst with FirstBanC Financial Services. You can contact him on 0302 660 709 or at [email protected]

[email protected]

Source: Justice Adu l thebftonline.com l Ghana

B&FT Digest – Edition 15 (24-06-2016)

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