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 GRA targets GH¢146bn in 2024

• Rev. Dr Owusu-Amoah (middle) in a chat with the Board Chairman of GRA, Tony Oteng-Gyasi (left), and Executive Secretary of the Importers and Exporters Association, Sampson Asaki Awingobit (right)

• Rev. Dr Owusu-Amoah (middle) in a chat with the Board Chairman of GRA, Tony Oteng-Gyasi (left), and Executive Secretary of the Importers and Exporters Association, Sampson Asaki Awingobit (right)

 The Ghana Rev­enue Authority (GRA) is targeting to collect GH¢146 billion revenue this year.

This represents a 37.73 per cent increase in the GH¢106 billion collected in 2023.

As part of efforts to ensure the realisation of the target, Commis­sioner General of GRA, Rev. Ami­shaddai Owusu – Amoah, said the Authority was employing interna­tional best practices, including cus­tomer-centred services, to promote tax compliance in addition to the deployment of new technologies.

He was speaking in Accra yes­terday at this year’s Tax Customer Experience Conference organised by the GRA.

The event was on the theme “Building a Growth-Friendly Tax Environment”.

“I want to emphasise the importance of a customer-centric approach in our dealings with our taxpayers. It is crucial that as managers we encourage our staff to remain professional at all times when dealing with taxpayers and colleagues.

This approach together with employing technology to simpli­fy our processes and procedures among others will go a long way in improving GRAs relationship with taxpayers and fostering voluntary tax compliance,” Rev. Dr Owu­su-Amoah stated.

He said in an era of rapid technological advancement and evolving customer expectation, there was the need for “agility and innovation” for tax administra­tors in order to stay relevant and achieve their mandate.

This, he explained, was the rea­son for the number of strides that had been made in the recent past by GRA to ensure that digitalisa­tion was employed to ensure that taxpayers have a seamless, efficient and effective means of transacting tax business.

In a statement read on his behalf, Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, said it was important for GRA to ensure that it was building a growth-friendly tax environment as it was crucial in voluntary tax compliance, among others, ultimately leading to eco­nomic expansion.

The ministry, as the driving force behind the GRA, he said, was committed to supporting initiatives that prioritise customer experience and enhance voluntary compliance.

He noted that the automation of a number of processes and proce­dures, the recent introduction of the Public Financial Management for Service Delivery (PFM4SD) project and improved tax educa­tion among others were improving service standards.

Mr Ofori-Atta said the ministry had developed policies and facili­tated legislations aimed at simplify­ing tax payment processes.

Dr Brago Antwi-Agyei, Head of the Customer Experience Unit, GRA, said the team undertook key initiatives, including the develop­ment of a service charter which had been reviewed and would be released this year, set up a call centre, engaging staff and develop­ing a customer journey mapping to help identify the needs of custom­ers for service improvement.

This year, she said, the unit was working on data driven customer service initiatives and the setting up of a multi-channel contact cen­tre that would serve as a customer experience solution that integrates multiple communication tools.

 BY CLAUDE NYARKO ADAMS

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