The Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) Marketers Association says the price of LPG will go up from Monday, 18th October, 2021 irrespective of the removal of the Price Stabilisation and Recovery Levies (PSRL) for the next two months.
For LPG, consumers will be cushioned by only 14 pesewas as a consequence of the removal of the PSRL.
However, the price of LPG is expected to go up by about 40 pesewas per kilo from next week, 18th October, 2021.
The Vice-president of the LPG Marketers Association, Gabriel Kumi, told Joy Business that the consumption of LPG has gone down and the situation is getting dire.
“Obviously, any measurement to cushion consumers in the form of price reduction is welcomed by our association. But we are of the view that we should be able to manage the expectation of the consumer because the fact that this tax is going to be suspended does not necessarily mean price of petroleum product is going to go down.”
“If you take a product like LPG for instance, by Friday [15th October, 2021] which is the beginning of the next window, price of LPG is supposed to go up by 40 to 50 pesewas per kilo. Now the price stabilisation levy is about 14 pesewas, so even if Ghana succeeds in implementing the price stabilisation levy on Friday, what it means is that price of LPG is going to go up by about 26 pesewas to 30 pesewas”, he outlined further.
Despite this, Mr. Kumi expressed delight that government is responding to it call to remove existing taxes on LPG and encourage many Ghanaians to use the fuel product.
“We are also excited that gradually government is beginning to reason in our persistent and consistent call for removal of taxes from a product like the LPG because currently the consumption of LPG is on a decline. We are not growing as we should because of high prices.”
He added that the consumer is presently paying ¢7.8 per kilo of LPG and “our projection is that by December 2021, if we don’t take serious measures to reduce price of LPG we should be buying LPG at about ¢10 per kilo”.
“This is going to throw away a lot of people from consuming LPG which is very dangerous for our environment and very dangerous for mother Ghana. So we would want to renew our call on government to consider removing the existing taxes on the LPG as we always said this is a product we need to subsidise”, he stressed.
He mentioned that some neighbouring countries have subsidise LPG, adding, “but in Ghana we put as much as 20% tax on the product and this is seriously affecting consumption and we call on government to do something about that.”
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