Government has served notice that it is planning on taxing “commercial activities” of churches in the country.
This was made known Thursday, November 23, 2017, by Godfred Yeboah Dame, a deputy Attorney-General arguing that the move was necessary because such activities fall out of the legal remit of the churches’ operation across the country.
There has been a long-standing debate over whether or not government should tax churches with some asking for churches to be roped into the tax net.
Speaking on the side of a roundtable discussion organized by the Kingdom Equip Network, the deputy Attorney General said the time is now to put the old age debate to bed by slapping taxes on nonreligious activities of churches.
“…The legal regime now provides for the taxation of activities of churches which essentially bother on business,” Mr. Yeboah-Dame told Starr News’ Mawuena Egbeta at the sidelines of the round table discussion.
“It is only in respect of activities which are charitable that churches are exempted from taxation. So, even the current law in the country…warrants that we tax them [churches] for activities which are commercial or bother on trading or business,” he elucidated further.
Source: Ghana/StarrFMonline.com/103.5FM