Akatsi, Jan. 27, – The National
Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) has ended a 40-day tax education in the
Akatsi South District with a call on the citizens to honour their tax
obligations.
Mr Godwin Agboada, the Akatsi
South District Director of the NCCE, told the community members, civil society
and religious groupings that the Central Government and local assemblies needed
taxes for rapid socioeconomic development.
He said roads, schools, health
facilities and potable water were all provided from tax revenue even in
advanced nations.
Mr Agboada said the Assemblies’
and Members of Parliament’s Common Funds were generated through tax revenues
from which scholarships were paid for students, support was given to disaster
victims, and other social interventions were provided and called for
compliance.
He said the tax revenue could
also support the Government to successfully run the Free Senior High School
Policy and the School Feeding Programme.
Mr Agboada said without tax
revenue, the country's national debt would increase and standards of living
would drop.
He said tax defaulters risked
prosecution and cautioned against reneging on such a constitutional obligation.
The campaign also targeted
students in schools as agents to further reach people in the community.
The exercise, which started in
October last year, with support from the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), was on
the theme: “Tax for National Development – Our Tax is Our Future.”
GNA

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