The
Industrial and Commercial Workers Union (ICU-Ghana) has charged the government
to turn attention to the legal profession with taxation if the country wants to
increase revenue generation.
General
Secretary, Solomon Kotei says workers in other sectors would get some respite if
revenue collection agencies widen the tax net to cover all trades and
professions.
Tax is based on income and the profession
of the person making the money has no bearing at all on taxation.
Income
tax is among the domestic taxes administered by the Ghana Revenue Authority. Such
taxation includes the corporate tax paid by companies on their
profits in the year; the Personal Income Tax for the self-employed
and the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) contributions, which are
withholdings from salaries of employees.
According
to the ICU, workers in the formal sector are unfairly taxed whilst other
professionals enjoy unlimited tax holidays, particularly citing the law
chambers and the court system.
“I’m
yet to see lawyers who pay tax to this economy”, charged Mr. Kotei. “We engage
lawyers and we don’t see their tax returns and if you go to the courts, you see
lawyers charging clients and they taking the money direct into their pockets”.
The
Union has set an agenda to engage employers, especially government, to ease the
tax burden on workers by targeting all professions with taxation.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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