Working Paper 202

This study compares the implementation of electronic transaction taxes (e-levies) in two West African countries: Ghana (Electronic Transfer Levy (E-Levy)), and Nigeria (Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL)). We employ a multifaceted approach to evaluate differences and similarities in design approaches, focusing on fiscal legal frameworks, policy-making and administration, and observable outcomes, including pricing, market development (usage patterns), and tax revenue.

Our findings highlight that the e-levies in Ghana and Nigeria differ due to varying political, economic, and legal dynamics associated with each country. Both countries tax electronic transfer values (amounts) above a threshold, but the nature and structure of these levies vary. Ghana applies a new specific 1 per cent tax on electronic transfers exceeding GH₵100 (US$6.82) daily. Nigeria applies a flat fee of NG₦50 (US$0.034) for transactions over NG₦10,000 (US$6.73). Ghana targets domestic electronic money transfers, featuring a broad spectrum of exemptions, while Nigeria focuses on electronic deposits and electronic money transfers, including remittances, excluding intra-bank transactions.

Despite initial opposition, Ghana enacted the E-Levy to include informal economy transactions and enhance domestic resource mobilisation. Electronic transactions have surged in Ghana, while Nigeria’s market faces infrastructure challenges but shows slow progress. Telecom operators dominate mobile money in Ghana; banks lead in Nigeria due to delayed telecom licensing. Insights into revenue allocation indicate differing intentions. At the same time, both e-levies contribute a maximum of 2 per cent to overall tax revenue – Ghana aims for road infrastructure, and Nigeria intends to fund social amenities, though evidence is scarce

Authors

Hannelore Niesten

Hannelore Niesten is an ICTD consultant working as a Research Officer for the DIGITAX programme. Hannelore holds a PhD in Law from Maastricht University and Hasselt University (double degree), an LLM in Business and Finance law from George Washington University, Advanced Masters in Tax Law and Notary Law from the Catholic University of Louvain, and Masters in Globalization and Law, and European Law from Maastricht University.

Isaac Kobina Amoako

Isaac Kobina Amoako is a Chief Revenue Officer and head of the Project Management Unit under the Transformation Office of Ghana Revenue Authority. He is a member and technical lead on the E-Levy Technical Committee, a member of the E-VAT Technical Committee, and the technical lead on the E-Levy Research Committee set up under the direction of the Economic Management Team of the Government of Ghana. Isaac holds a BSc in Computer Science from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, and an MBA in Project Management from the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration.

Bala Dahiru Abdullahi

Bala Dahiru Abdullahi is a Manager in the Tax Data Management Department of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Nigeria. He holds a BSc and MSc in Economics from the Universities of Abuja and Ibadan (Nigeria), an MSc in Data Science and Analytics from the University of Nottingham, England, and a PhD in Econometrics from Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan. His research interests span revenue forecasting and tax policy analysis, financial econometrics, macroeconometrics, and tax data analytics. Dahiru has provided research and consultancy services to the African Tax Administration Forum, the African Development Bank, and the Centre for Management Development.
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