25.9 C
Accra
Saturday, June 13, 2026
HomeNews2022 budget: Projected 42.9% rise in revenue bold and necessary for debt...

2022 budget: Projected 42.9% rise in revenue bold and necessary for debt sustainability – Tesah Capital

Date:

Asset management company, Tesah Capital, has described as bold and necessary for debt sustainability, government’s plan to raise GHS100.5 billion in total revenue for the 2022 fiscal year.           

Tesah Capital notes the projected revenue which represents a 42.9 percentage points increment (GHS30.5 billion) on the 2021 revenue outturn of GHS70.34 billion will increase the revenue generation capacity of the country.

The projected revenue increment, the company believes, is necessary given that the country has long suffered from narrow revenue mobilization due to the existence of a large informal sector.

“The country depends largely on indirect taxes and import income from few primary commodities; though direct taxes as a share of total taxes witnessed some improvement from 42% in 2017 to 50% in 2020. Revenue targets have been missed for most of the years, from 2017 to 2020, highlighting the weakness in revenue forecasting capacity,” Tesah Capital noted in its review of the 2022 budget.

The projected 42.9% revenue increment is expected to be achieved by the government through the introduction of the electronic transaction levy, the 15% increment in government services, reintroduction of the 3% Flat Levy, property rates, and the government’s new resolve to pass the tax exemptions bill in 2022 to check revenue leakages as the immediate steps to increase revenues.

At the moment, Ghana’s public debt is unsustainable and pegged at 77.8 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GHS341.8 billion) and further projected to continue on an elevated path.

According to Tesah Capital, public debt as a ratio of GDP is expected to hit 80.4% by the end of 2021.

Of the total debt, domestic debt will amount to GHS185 billion representing 52.3 percent of GDP with external debt also amounting to GHS169 billion representing 47.7 percent of GDP.

Tesah Capital adds that the projected 7.4 percent fiscal deficit (GHS35.11 billion) for 2022 will increase the public debt to GHS395.81 billion.

“The expected fiscal deficit of cedis 35.11 billion cedis will increase the public debt to cedis 395.81 billion cedis. The rising inflationary risk in advanced economies implies that the government will face an increased cost of financing the debt through international debt markets.

“This suggests that the government is likely to continue with the trend of using the domestic debt market to finance a larger portion of the public debt.

Increased borrowing in the local debt market could lead to an increase in interest rates and crowd out the private sector from the loan market,” the AMC notes.

Interest payments, employee compensation and capital expenditure as components of domestic revenue Tesah Capital asserts are expected to marginally decline in 2022.

According to Tesah Capital, interest payments, employee compensation and capital expenditure over the last three years have been a major drainer of domestic revenue averaging 43%, 45%, and 19% respectively.

“However, their component of domestic revenue is expected to decline from 47%, 48%, and 18% in 2021 to 38%, 36%, and 16% in 2022 respectively,” Tesah Capital notes.

The marginal decline in the components of government’s expenditure, Tesah Capital states, is a result of the relatively higher projected growth in domestic revenue (30.5%) compared to projected growth in Interest payments (13.1%), employee compensation (7.9%), and capital expenditure (22.3%).

The projected total expenditure for the 2022 fiscal year (including payments for the clearance of arrears) is GHS137.5 billion, equivalent to 27.4 percent of GDP.

The expenditure estimate for the 2022 fiscal year represents a growth of 23.2 percent above the projected outturn of GHS111.6 billion, equivalent to 25.3 percent of GDP for 2021.

Key drivers of expenditure growth include capital expenditure, funding of key government flagship programmes, wage bill,s and interest payments.

- Sponsored -spot_imgspot_img

Disclaimer: The views, opinions, comments, and statements expressed by readers and contributors on this platform are solely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Imax Media Group or its affiliates.

Send your news stories to editor@max.com.gh and via WhatsApp on +233 506-367-196
Join our WhatsApp channel for the latest news and updates.

Max TV
Max TVhttps://max.com.gh
Ghana’s Leading Digital Television And Terrestrial Box In Sports, Entertainment And More.
- Sponsored -scratch for win

Stay Connected

562,687FansLike
2,463FollowersFollow
583,200FollowersFollow
51,019FollowersFollow
95,943SubscribersSubscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related Stories

Partey Denied Entry Into Canada Due to Rape Charges

Thomas Partey is expect not to feature for the...

Ronwen Williams Cries Over Rest of Africa Abandoning South Africa

South Africa’s goalkeeper Ronwen Williams has reacted after the...

Henry Reveals Why Jimenez Wept After Scoring Against SA

Arsenal legend, Thierry Henry, has revealed why Raul Jimenez...

Mexico’s Gilberto Mora Made History On Opening Day

Mexico’s Gilberto Mora became the first player born after...

USA To Open Campaign LIVE On Max TV

Mauricio Pochettino's inconsistently talented team will be looking to...

Berhalter Tips USA to Go Far

Former United States boss Gregg Berhalter is confident Mauricio...

South Korea Turn Attention To Mexico

On Thursday, South Korea opened their Group A campaign...

FIFA Appoints Moroccan Ref for Germany-Curacao Clash

FIFA has appointed Moroccan referee Jalal Jiyed to officiate...

Black Stars Arrive for World Cup Opener

The Black Stars of Ghana have arrived in Providence,...

I saw a desperate Mexico— Hugo Broos

Bafana Bafana head coach Hugo Broos claims that his...