Distributional Effects of Ghana’s Value Added Tax Regime
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Date
2021-07-23
Authors
Andoh, Francis Kwaw
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Economic Research Consortium
Abstract
This paper examines two distributional aspects of Ghana’s Value Added Tax: the
distribution of burden and benefits from VAT exemptions across different households,
and the changes in prices of consumer goods across different consumption expenditure
items. The results show that the VAT regime has evolved from being progressive
to regressive. Strikingly, poor households have increased their expenditure on
telecommunication, transport, housing and utilities despite the increase in prices. In
terms of policy, the study concludes that the current exemptions are not well targeted
considering the shifts in expenditure components over time. The government may
either abolish them completely or shift the emphasis to reflect the consumption
dynamics.
Description
Keywords
Fiscal policy, , Value added tax, , Tax burden, , Distributive justice , Incidence