Accra — The Ghana Union of Traders' Associations (GUTA) urged the government on Wednesday to suspend implementation of the Value Added Tax Act 1151, saying the January 1, 2026 regime places complex 20% VAT burdens on informal traders and risks higher consumer prices and job losses. GUTA President Clement Boateng demanded reinstatement of a 3–4% flat rate, called for suspension of task-force enforcement, and proposed incentive-based registration to broaden compliance. The Ghana Revenue Authority has said the new rate will not raise consumer prices. Talks or review requests remain ongoing as of February. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Christopher Adams and reviewed by editorial team.
If implemented, incentive-based registration could expand the taxable base and increase government revenue while potentially reducing enforcement costs for the Ghana Revenue Authority.
Informal-sector traders face increased administrative burdens, potential penalties, and higher operating costs under Act 1151, risking reduced profitability and possible business closures.
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Ghana traders demand flat VAT rate amid protests
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