Tema March 25, - The Ningo
Prampram District Director of the National Commission on Civic Education
(NCCE), Ms. Gifty Agyeiwaa Badu, has challenged Ghanaians to acquire their Tax
Identification Numbers (PIN) to enable them transact official businesses.
She said, “The PIN has been
available for a long time, but this time around the government is saying
without it, one cannot undertake certain business transactions in Ghana.”
She said this on Sunday during
one of NCCE and Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) collaborative campaigns on tax
compliance which was dubbed “our taxes our future”, at the Presbyterian Church
of Ghana, Mataheko branch, in the Ningo Prampram District.
Responding to whether the
unemployed could acquire the PIN, she said, “Go to the various GRA offices
closer to you and obtain it because it is for free.”
She said NCCE was doing its bid
to inform the public about the need to pay taxes, but lack of motivation to
read on the part of Ghanaians has accounted for low tax payment, because most
people did not understand why they should pay tax, adding that “as you read you
acquire more knowledge and know that it is our civic duty to pay taxes.”
Mr. Alex Boateng Amane, a member
of the Presby Church, in appreciating the need to register for the PIN, also
wondered why people in his Mataheko community lived in deplorable conditions
and were still expected to pay tax.
He said “the roads we will ply to
pay the taxes are not good, so if they demand taxes they should think about
us.”
In an interview with the Ghana
News Agency (GNA), Ms. Badu said the payment of taxes was a civic duty because
the constitution which was the mother law of the land had placed a demand on
citizens to do so.
She added that, “Tax payment was
not an imposition but a responsibility that comes with the enjoyment of
rights.”
She said therein could the
citizenry demand accountability from the government because the same
constitution that established this law also mandated the government to take care
of its citizens.
As has been determined by the
current government, enforcement of the acquisition of a PIN before one could
transact certain businesses in Ghana would commence from the first of April,
2018.
Some of the activities one would
need a PIN to transact include opening a bank accounts, acquiring a driver’s
license, clearing goods from the harbour and acquiring a passport.
GNA

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