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Ghana offers lower levy as a sweetener to higher gold royalties regime, says lobby

The head of the mining lobby in Ghana has said that Ghana's finance minister offered to reduce a mining tax by two percentage points to help push a new gold royalties regime through.

Africa's leading gold producer is looking to replace the flat rate of royalty with a sliding scale between 5% and 12% in order to maximize value at a time when prices are surging.

The new gold royalties regime will come into effect in 21 days if parliament does not amend it. It adds one percentage point to every $500 increase in gold prices, similar to Burkina Faso's system. Ghana's gold-mining companies want to reduce the rate.

After recent discussions, the Chamber of Mines CEO Kenneth Ashigbey said that Finance Minister Cassiel Forson had instead suggested cutting a fee called "the growth and sustainability leviey".

Ashigbey stated that "we asked for the 3% levy to be removed completely, but the Minister is only offering to remove two points."

The Ghanaian finance and mining ministries have not responded to comments immediately.

Sources within the government who were familiar with the discussions confirmed that the Minister had proposed a two-percentage-point reduction in the levy.

Source: The finance minister said he would be open to dialogue with companies, but parliament could still pass the royalty amendment in its current form unless the ministry provides an alternative.

MINERS STARTED PAYING HIGHER TAX AFTER FAILED RESISTANCE

Last year, the GSL was increased to 3%. The mining sector regulator said in January that producers initially refused to pay, but then paid after talks continued.

Ashigbey, a mining representative, said that miners were looking for a new gold royalty system in the range of 4-8% with one percentage point set aside for a fund to support host communities.

He stated that 'the chamber also wants broader royalty price bands. They argue that the government thresholds are too easy to trigger higher rates, which could'squeeze more expensive or less profitable mines.

Ashigbey stated that the chamber seeks urgent engagement.

He said, "The question is if government wants revenues on a sustained basis or only in the next few year before investing elsewhere." Maxwell Akalaare Adombila, Emmanuel Bruce and Robbie Corey Boulet edited the article.

(source: Reuters)