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Private universities in the country have called for an immediate restoration of the tax exempt status of private universities.
Until
recently, private universities in Ghana were exempted from the payment
of corporate tax in accordance with Section 10 (1d) of the Internal
Revenue Act.
Section 10 (1d) of the Act exempts “income accruing
to or derived by an exempt organisation other than income from
business”. Section 94 of Act 592 defined exempt organisation as
“religious, charitable or educational institution of a public
character”.
The Internal Revenue Act (Act 592) was amended by Act
859 in May, this year, with the aim of bringing private universities
into the tax net.
But the development, according to the
Conference of Heads of Private Universities in Ghana (CHPUG), was
detrimental to the interest of university education and Ghana’s
development planning.
There are 63 private colleges and
universities, admitting 26 per cent of students who enter universities
every year. In the 2011/2012 academic year, the private universities had
an enrollment of 50,000 students.
A statement signed by the
Chairman of CHPUG, Professor Kwesi Yankah, who is also the President of
the Central University College, said “this new development suggests a
diminishing recognition by government of the critical role played by
private universities in any programme of sustainable development and
poverty reduction and deepens our conviction that there is growing
discrimination and a lack of equity in accessing state funding and
amenities by universities in Ghana.”
It said CHPUG considered the
withdrawal of the tax exempt status of private universities as a sad
development in the history of private education.
It said the
withdrawal might also lead to a desperate search for alternative revenue
sources by private universities, which could adversely affect tuition
fees.
“We, therefore, call on the government to restore the
tax-exempt status of private universities to enable this critical sector
to discharge its responsibilities in the national interest,” it
stressed.
However, when reached for a response to the call by the
CHPUG, the Minister of Education, Professor Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang,
said “I have neither seen the statement nor have been engaged in a
discussion on the subject”.
The statement said private
universities had over the years been denied access to the GETFund, state
scholarships, bursaries for staff capacity building, and state funding
for research even where programmes for which the facilities were meant
were considered key in the nation’s scheme of priorities.
“It was
thus predictable that private universities were totally ignored when
the government recently gave subsidies to universities to expand
infrastructure to cope with the large intake of students expected this
year. Beneficiary universities here were exclusively the state-owned
universities, leaving private universities to their fate,” the statement
said.
It said education was a public good, and laid a critical
foundation in any process of development by producing the critical mass
of human capital needed in the effort.
It advised that private
universities in Ghana should be considered an infant knowledge industry
that needed state support to grow, and pointed out that a typical
private university in Ghana was just about 10 years old, and still
struggled to survive in a sector that was capital intensive.
It
described the timing of the policy as unfortunate as the country had
reached a crucial point in its history where the private sector in
education was crucially needed to mop up student overflows from two
streams of senior high school applicants.
According to the statement, private universities admitted 26 per cent of students that entered universities every year.
“Any
state policy that ends up weakening private universities could have
adverse social consequences: it would further reduce the percentage of
high school students that gain access to university education; and could
throw into the streets thousands of SHS graduates who cannot be
absorbed by the public sector. But it can also trigger staff downsizing
and staff lay-offs which could worsen the unemployment situation in the
country,” the statement added. |
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Source: Daily Graphic |
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