The Ghana Revenue Authority(GRA) has appointed Colonel Kwadwo Damoah (Rtd), as Acting Commissioner, Customs Division amidst other changes made at the GRA top brass.

Julie Essiam, has also been appointed Acting Commissioner, Support Services Division, while Ammishaddai Owusu-Amoah has been made the Acting Commissioner for Domestic Tax, Revenue Division.

Julie Essiam, Acting Commissioner, Support Services Division

The three new officials will take over from, Mr Kwesi Gyimah Asante, former Commissioner with the Domestic Tax Revenue Division; Mr Isaac Crentsil, former Commissioner with the Customs Division; and Mr Fred Charles Anson, former Commissioner with the Support Services Division, who have all been reassigned.

A statement issued by GRA said the move is in line with ongoing reforms by government at the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) to improve performance, consistent with the 2019 Budget (paragraph 288).

Meanwhile, about one thousand four hundred and eighteen (1,418) employees are being rotated to other areas of the organisation, said the GRA statement.

The statement added:”Further changes will be made to retool GRA for the critical task of mobilizing revenue to finance improvements in the lives of our people.”

 

Below is the full statement

PRESS RELEASE: GRA MANAGEMENT AND PERSONNEL CHANGES

 

Accra, Sunday June 2, 2019…In line with ongoing reforms by Government at the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) to improve performance, consistent with the 2019 Budget (paragraph 288), there have been changes at the Top Management level of the institution. Also, about one thousand four hundred and eighteen (1,418) employees are being rotated to other areas of the organisation. Further changes will be made to retool GRA for the critical task of mobilizing revenue to finance improvements in the lives of our people.

  1. The reorganisation has been necessitated by three (3) main factors:
  • First, the Institution has grown significantly over the years, and current revenues of approximately GH¢38 billion make it one of the biggest Institutions in Ghana. This has created the need for much stronger, world-class structures.

 

  • Secondly, the number of employees of the GRA has increased significantly to about 7,000 and another 5,000 have been added through NABCO to shore up the authority’s revenue mobilization capacity, bringing the total employees to 12,000. GRA is now one of the largest employers outside the Civil Service.

 

  • Thirdly, there has been increasing need for better domestic revenue mobilization in order to realise the Ghana Beyond Aid agenda. With Ghana’s Revenue to GDP of 12.6%, below the West Africa average of 19.9%, there is the need to raise domestic revenue in a more efficient way in order to meet the country’s commitments. GRA revenues have failed to reach budget targets, and over the last three years there has been an accumulated gap of about GH¢3.5 billion.

 

  1. Given all of the above factors, it has become necessary to make changes to the Management and organisational structure to make it a much better performing institution.

 

  1. These changes are expected to bring several improvements in the institution. This includes bringing the best of private sector practices and combining that with public sector technical expertise to ensure that GRA is a better functioning institution. Additionally, these changes are expected to improve the overall level of professionalism and engender a customer-friendly mindset at GRA.

 

  1. In line with expectations, the new team will be expected to drive a number of critical transformational changes:
  • Modernising and digitising tax processes and systems;
  • Introducing big data and block chain technologies to improve compliance;
  • Expanding the tax base to encompass more effectively the informal sector and professional classes (currently there are over 6 million eligible tax paying individuals, however, only about 2.5 million have been registered and only about 1.2 million are active direct tax payers); and
  • Developing a stronger culture of performance and accountability;
  • Enhancing staff integrity and anticorruption measures;
  • Increasing the quality of tax payer services;
  • Respecting the client (taxpayer);
  • Creating a fair and firm tax organisation that ensures equitable treatment of every tax payer;
  • Tackling revenue leakages across both Domestic Tax and Customs;
  • Ensuring that best practices are shared, to create a truly world-class organisation.

 

  1. To drive this transformation, changes have been made at various levels across the entire organisation involving about one thousand four hundred and eighteen (1,418) employees who are being rotated to other areas of the Institution. At the leadership level, the following new appointments have been made:
  • Ammishaddai Owusu-Amoah Acting Commissioner for Domestic Tax Revenue Division

 

  • Colonel Kwadwo Damoah (Rtd), Acting Commissioner, Customs Division

 

  • Julie Essiam, Acting Commissioner, Support Services Division

 

7.       We take this opportunity to thank the current leadership team at GRA who have brought GRA thus far.  We wish the Commissioner-General and his new team success as they take the reins to lead GRA to the next level