Sammy Gyamfi, Esq., writes on the betting tax.

Date:

In the run-up to the 2020 elections, certain NPP social media activists have made frantic attempts to distort a statement I made concerning sports betting.

In answer to a question on how the NDC plans to pay the Sports Development Fund proposed in our 2020 platform, I stated in the aforementioned interview that the NDC will explore placing a tax on sports betting “like it is done in the UK.”

The issue that any objective mind should ask is, therefore, what laws govern sports betting taxation in the United Kingdom.

The answer is simple!
In the UK, bet winnings are not taxed. Rather, bet companies are heavily taxed. See

This is the example I cited and indicated that a future NDC government will consider post 2020. The new 10% tax on bet winnings that the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia/NPP government has introduced is the direct opposite of what pertains in the UK and the position I canvassed in 2020. Don’t be misled!

For the sake of clarity and emphasis, the NDC is vehemently opposed to the 10% tax that has been imposed by the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia/NPP government on bet winnings;

1. Sports betting although undesirable, has become a necessary evil given the state of hopelessness, joblessness and excruciating hardships that Ghanaian youths have been plunged into by the insensitive and reckless Akufo-Addo/Bawumia/NPP government.

2. Taxing bet winnings under the current excruciating economic conditions Ghanaians are facing, particularly, the high rate of inflation of 43.1% and the highest unemployment rate among others, is insensitive and totally unacceptable.

3. Government should be innovative in its bid to increase tax revenue and stop this lazy approach to taxation. If government is minded to raise tax revenue from betting, its focus should be on taxing multinational/foreign bet companies as it pertains in the UK and other jurisdictions and not poor Ghanaian youths who have been compelled by the harsh economic conditions in the country to seek refuge in sports betting for their very survival.

4. More importantly, the new 10% tax on bet winnings introduced by the NPP contravenes the government’s social contract with Ghanaians. That social contract is to the effect that; “taxation is a lazy approach to governance” and that an NPP government will “reduce the tax burden on Ghanaians” and move the country from “taxation to production”.

Contrary to this promise, the current NPP government has introduced over 25 tax handles since they took office in 2017- a clear betrayal of the trust of Ghanaians. These taxes have conspired to make life unbearable for the vast majority of Ghanaians, particularly the youths who can’t find jobs.

The NDC will not and cannot lend its support to the double standards the NPP continues to display relative to taxation, particularly at this time of unprecedented hardships.

5. Undoubtedly, Sports Betting has become a refuge for the millions of Ghanaian unemployed youths who have been compelled by the economic mismanagement of the NPP to depend on betting for survival. Imposing a 10% tax on bet winnings is therefore cruel. Given the difficult times we find ourselves in, the NDC fully supports calls for the immediate scrapping of the newly introduced 10% tax on bet winnings.

This is the official position of the great NDC on the newly-introduced 10% tax on bet winnings.

Sammy Gyamfi Esq.
National Communications Officer
National Democratic Congress

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

“Semenyo’s Goal Seals Bournemouth’s Historic Victory Over Manchester United at Old Trafford.”

Ghanaian forward Antoine Semenyo delivered a standout performance as...

“Ghana Standards Authority Takes Strong Action Against Poor-Quality Goods in Streets”

The Ghana Standards Authority (GSA) has deployed a team...

“¢25m Insufficient to Address Delayed Results, WAEC Says.”

The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has voiced disappointment...

Rising gospel star Milliesther celebrates God’s love in debut single.

Rising gospel musician Milliesther has officially stepped into the...

More like this
Related