The Commissioner-General of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), Rev. Dr. Ammishaddai Adu Owusu-Amoah, made news headlines over the week after he admitted at a public hearing of the Parliament of Ghana’s Public Accounts Committee (PAC) that he has been working for over three years without a contract following his compulsory retirement.
The GRA boss' continuous stay in office has made many Ghanaians more alarmed because the news comes weeks after the corruption allegations in the Strategic Mobilisation Ghana Ltd (SML) $100 million contract he signed which has led to some, including the Member of Parliament for Ningo-Prampram, Samuel Nartey Geroge, claiming that Dr Ammishaddai has been allowed to be in office to do the bidding of some top government official.
But whether the allegations are true or not the fact is that ordinary taxpayers might be the ones bearing the brunt of Dr. Ammishaddai's continuous stay in office without any verifiable contract.
Do you know that the GRA commissioner-general is Ghana's second highest-paid public servant?
Rev Ammishaddai is second to the Governor of the Bank of Ghana in terms of remuneration to public servants and is believed to receive a monthly salary of GH¢137,794.80.
In addition to the huge salary, the GRA boss is believed to receive the following benefits:
Housing allowance of GH¢6000
Home enhancement allowance of GH¢2000
Travel per diem of $1500
Clothing allowance GH¢10,000
Free medical care for spouses & kids
Yearly mandatory medical examination
GH¢2,000 for yearly replacement of lenses
Inconvenience allowance GH¢500 per day
Responsibility allowance GH¢1,500 per month
Monthly entertainment allowance GH¢1,500
DSTV Premium Service GH¢700
Official vehicle with monthly fuel coupons
Private car plus car loan
Vehicle maintenance allowance GH¢1,000 per month
3 personal security guards
Salary increases by 20% per annum
Even if the GRA boss does not receive all these benefits, his salary alone has cost ordinary Ghanaian taxpayers more than GH¢3.3 million if he has been working without a contract for only 2 years unless he is working for free. Ghanaians deserve the government's explanation on the matter.
BAI/OGB
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