The Commissioner-General of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), Mr Emmanuel Kofi Nti, has indicated that the authority’s revenue target of GH¢39.8 billion is achievable.
It raked in GH¢ 32.3 billion last year, registering a shortfall of GH¢1.1 billion.
The figure, however, represented a nominal growth of 22.3 percent over the 2016 collection and was the GRA’s best performance in the past five years.
He was speaking at the opening of the annual management retreat of the GRA in Kumasi.
“Transforming revenue mobilisation strategies: the way forward,” was the theme chosen for the two-day programme.
The Commissioner General urged hard work, commitment to duty, regular audits, visits to taxpayers’ business premises and regular compliance activities.
“Let’s recommit to do our best for our country”, he added.
Mr Nti signalled plans to undertake reforms of the customs warehousing, transit and re-exports regimes alongside intensified patrol to check smuggling.
He vowed that the authority would be resolute in working towards the success of the excise tax stamp – an innovation meant to monitor the payment of the correct amount of excise duty, eliminate the sale of counterfeit and illicit products.
He touched on the introduction of the “GFTrade and the Temporary Vehicle Importation Monitoring System (TVIMS) to aid the Customs Division to have access to the correct values of imported goods from the countries of exportation and verify values declared by importers.
This, he said, would enable the division to raise more revenue by discovering fraudulent declarations.
It would also help track temporarily imported vehicles which had over-stayed while at the same time identifying smuggled vehicles.
Mr. Simon Osei Mensah, Ashanti Regional Minister, echoed the need for GRA to broaden the tax net and to do more to ensure compliance.
He called for innovative strategies to engage and encourage people in the informal sector to honour their tax obligations.