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Mahama’s proposed mitigation levy ‘irrelevant’ – ACEP 

January 8, 2015
Reading Time: 2 mins read
President Mahama to attend EU-Africa Summit in Brussels

President John Mahama

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Energy think tank, the African Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) has described as “irrelevant,” President Mahama’s proposal for a new levy to be slapped on petroleum products.

According to ACEP, the introduction of a new tariff on fuel products will only worsen the plight of the Ghanaian.

President Mahama recommended that National Petroleum Authority (NPA) should consider what he described as a “mitigation levy” on petroleum products.

Officials of ACEP
Officials of ACEP

[contextly_sidebar id=”6TgRXVXZMxjWlDuDHf6qA17TBGwe7Lpx”]According to him, the tax will accumulate the windfalls to cushion consumers, should these prices begin to rise again.

“I think we need a mitigation levy so we can save for the future. I say this because the price of oil on the world market will certainly rise again. I feel that Parliament has to sit down and decide when we will save money accrued from the excess recovery. We can just decide to put in the litigation fund to reduce the effect of another increment on Ghanaians,” he said. –

However speaking in an interview with Citi News, the Director of Programmes at ACEP, Benjamin Boakye insisted his proposal was  irrelevant.

“I am saying it is not relevant because you cannot manipulate oil prices from Ghana and you cannot save so much to be able to mitigate future price rise so what you do is to allow the market to dictate the prices.”

“In other jurisdictions what you do is that world prices rise so much above what people can bear you rather try to cushion people by reducing taxes on the product but in our case we decided to take more taxes and after taking more taxes we are proposing another fund to get more from customers and as consumers that is not fair,” he said.

The price of Brent crude oil has fallen to a new five-and-a-half year low of $52.27 per barrel, its lowest level since May 2009.

Meanwhile, prices of petroleum products in Ghana have been reduced by 10%.

–

By: Marian Efe Ansah/citifmonline.com/Ghana

Tags: MedCirclesghPalaver NewspaperSt Augustine's CollegeWassa Akropong
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