This,
in essence, opens greater opportunities for Ghanaians to participate in the
extractives sector.
But
Ghana’s failure to add value to gold locally has been described as a bane to
deriving maximum benefit from the mining industry.
It
has emerged that nothing by way of local content would change in the extractive
industry if Ghana continues to take its mineral royalties in cash instead of
raw gold.
“In
the oil sector, royalties and other tax payments are computed and they give us
crude oil and we decide what to do with our crude oil; in the mining sector,
they [the mining firms] go and sell. Infact some of them go and sell in dollars
and come and give us cedis…are we allergic to dollars?” quizzed Dr. Steve
Manteaw, a member of the Ghana Extractives Industries Transparency Initiative
(GHEITI).
He
suggests a shift from the extreme focus on revenue to benefit maximization in
natural resource management.
Revenue
streams from the mining sector to the national budget include mineral right
fees, ground rent, property rate, mineral royalty, dividends and corporate tax.
At
a time the Ghanaian economic is challenged in stemming the tide of the cedi
depreciation against the US dollar and other foreign currencies, Dr. Manteaw
says the fiscal regime should not encourage foreign exchange flight.
“We
need to make the necessary policy decisions to tighten up and make it difficult
if not impossible for foreign exchange to leave this country,” he stated.
Gold
accounts for around 90 percent of total mineral output in Ghana – production
climbed to record 4.3million ounces in 2012. Though prices have slumped
globally, the gold mining sector continues to rake in billions of dollars every
year.
Gold
is a commodity in demand – generally used for fabrication or investment. Fabricated
gold has a variety of end-uses, including jewelry, electronics, dentistry,
industrial and decorative uses.
Dr.
Steve Manteaw says adding value to raw gold locally will create employment and increase
revenue to the State.
“This
country will be exporting jewelry and not gold bars for which we get pittance;
you get more for jewelry and by doing that you’ll be creating tax
opportunities, Ghanaians will be employed in the jewelry making industry, they
will pay taxes and this can be used to finance our national development,” he noted.
Ghana
is Africa’s second and world’s 10th largest producer of gold.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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