A growing debate over church taxation and political influence is complicating revenue administration in Ghana, with experts warning that blurred boundaries between religious and commercial activity are creating significant gaps in the tax net.
Ghana’s Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) recognises churches as tax-exempt institutions, but only where their income is applied exclusively to religious or charitable purposes. In practice, however, many churches have expanded well beyond spiritual activities, operating schools, hospitals, media companies, and commercial ventures that generate substantial revenue.
Christopher K. Beyereh, founder of the African Centre for Tax Education and Policy (ACTEP), says such business-related income should legally fall within the tax net, but enforcement remains a persistent challenge. “Many churches in Ghana engage in commercial activities, such as running schools, hospitals, and businesses, which generate significant revenue,” he noted.
The debate sharpens considerably when politics enters the picture. Beyereh points out that a significant number of senior politicians maintain open affiliations with churches, with some holding influential internal roles. Critics argue these connections may be creating an informal protective barrier against regulatory scrutiny. “The involvement of top politicians in churches has also raised questions about the potential for favouritism and corruption,” Beyereh said, adding that some politicians have been accused of using church affiliations to shield business interests from tax examination.
The governance dimension of the debate received renewed attention following remarks by Ahmed Ibrahim, who disclosed that approximately 98% of registered churches in Ghana operate as single-owner institutions. Without a formal separation between personal and institutional finances, regulators face difficulty determining what constitutes charitable income and what amounts to private gain, creating conditions that are easily exploited.
For salaried workers and small business owners subject to routine tax deductions, the perceived imbalance is a source of frustration. The concern, experts say, is not merely about lost revenue but about institutional credibility. If political relationships shape how tax laws are applied, public confidence in the system could erode.
Defenders of the status quo argue that subjecting churches to taxation could undermine religious freedom and disrupt charitable work that often fills gaps the state leaves unaddressed. Beyereh acknowledges both sides of the argument, but insists the distinction between taxing faith and taxing commercial activity conducted under the cover of faith is critical and must not be obscured.
Ghana currently faces the challenge of protecting religious freedom while closing the enforcement gaps that allow commercial church enterprises to operate outside the same scrutiny applied to other businesses.


