The Mobile Money Agents Association of Ghana protested against the implementation of the electronic transaction levy.
According to the Association, “It will elicit behaviors that will undermine the cash lite system and digitalization drive of the economy”; and also “millions of young people will lose their jobs.”
The Mobile Money Agents Association of Ghana has warned that maintaining and implementing the proposed 1.75% E-levy contained in the 2022 budget will lead to a raft of adverse consequences including a spike in robberies.
At a press conference on Tuesday, 7 December 2021, the secretary to the group, Mr Evans Otumfuo, said: “As a union that directly relates to mobile money, we have identified 12 consequences that we’ll be facing if the government still pursues the e-levy”.
“It will elicit behaviors that will undermine the cash lite system and digitalization drive of the economy”; and also “millions of young people will lose their jobs”, he noted.
Additionally, he said there will be an 80 per cent chance of going back to the cash system and innovative businesses that try to leverage mobile money may lose their investment.
Also, he said the “country will be taken several years back from where we have gotten to” while the gap between the “banked and the unbanked will just sink”.
Furthermore, Mr Otumfuo said “investors in the sector will begin to draw back, which, of course, we are also part of”, and “it will slow down a tall of economic activities”.
“Robberies and criminal activities will be on the ascendency”, he warned, and “long hours of doing business will greet us again” with the cost of doing business “skyrocketing”.
“For these clear consequences, we also advocate that the electronic levy should be scrapped for more consultation”, he proposed.
According to him, “even before the above-listed implications slam the economy, the proposed levy, since its presentation, has resulted in a downward trend, which is highly critical to the mobile money business”.
Source: www.ghanaweb.com