Mining Contributes Meaninfully To The Economy
Mining firms in the country last year paid GH¢179,978,383 to the government as revenue representing more than 14 per cent of the country's total internal revenue collection, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, Ms Joyce Aryee, has announced
This was aside dividends and corporate taxes paid to the government. The CEO made this known when he interacted with the Ashanti Region Press Corps at a networking launch in Kumasi
The sector also returned more than 63 per cent of mineral revenue to the State of which six per cent went to the central government and the assemblies in the form of royalties and taxes.
Ten per cent was paid to the Volta River Authority and Electricity Company of Ghana for power supply with 13 per cent going to oil marketing companies.
The mining companies also paid about GH¢73 million representing three per cent of mineral revenue as taxes, levies and duties on the product to government as well as margins to the oil marketing companies.
Shedding light on the industry and macro economy in the past year, Ms Aryee said 63 per cent of the mineral revenue returned to the country through the Bank of Ghana, whilst 22 per cent was used to procure inputs locally.
She said having identified small scale mining as a potential to generate employment and value to the state, the chamber had advocated the simplification of the current cumbersome licensing procedure to enable small- scale miners to operate legally.
The illegal status and lack of formal regulation in small scale mining in which more than 500,000 people are engaged, poses serious challenges in terms of adherence to safety, health and environment and reversing the gains of the mining industry, as a catalyst for national development.