A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, November 25, 2016
2017 Budget Is Good But Not Good Enough!

By Hema Senanayake –November 24, 2016
Ravi Karunanayake has
allocated funds amounting to billions from the 2017 budget to provide
“tablets” to all students who are in Advanced Level classes and for the
teachers. I hope that cash vouchers would be issued to students to buy
tablets of their choice. Instead of doing it, if the Ministry of Finance
or the Ministry Education decides to provide tablets to students and
teachers then I feel that there is an element of corruption inbuilt in
the budget itself with this proposal because this is a government which
provides cash vouchers instead of fertilizers to farmers. Also this is a
government which issues cash vouchers to students to buy uniform
clothes and so should be in providing tablets too.
However, in general the budget is good but not good enough. From this
budget, the Minister of Finance has corrected a few mistakes done in his
previous budget. That is good. For an example, in the budget for 2016,
corporate tax was reduced to 15% and personal income tax was reduced to
be one flat rate of 15%. Progressive tax structure was removed in the
previous budget. Even when a forum organized by Earnest & Young
hailed these proposals, I argued against it. I wrote as follows:
“However, there was a post Budget Forum in Colombo, organized by the
Ernst & Young. In the forum it was mentioned that Sri Lanka’s 15%
corporate tax rate is the third best or equaling with Germany and only
behind Ireland’s 12.5%. In personal taxation of 15% flat rate, Sri Lanka
remained lowest among selected countries compiled by E&Y. It was
further pointed out that, “In a personal tax view point Sri Lanka is the
most attractive for people to work in terms of tax. In the region we
are paying the lowest tax rate.” Amazing! Isn’t it? Where is economics?
What about the filling of “gap.” What about making businesses more
viable? What about preventing unsustainable credit growth – private and
public? Our closest neighbor, India’s corporate tax rate is 30% and
targeting double digit GDP growth while Sri Lanka’s GDP for the year
2016 has been downgraded to 5.7% by the CBSL.” (Colombo Telegraph, November 27, 2015)
The above mistake has been rectified in the 2017 budget. Even though I
am not happy with the tax structure and the way it has been
reintroduced, I am happy that Ravi Karunanayake has reintroduced the
progressive tax structure from the budget of 2017. The government has
been telling that they need to increase direct taxes while reducing
indirect taxes. Economically this is a good objective. But the
government can’t basically achieve this objective without having
progressive tax structure in corporate taxes and in personal taxation.
Accordingly the mistake done in 2016 budget has been corrected in the
2017 budget.
But the most important correction has been done in regard to the
macroeconomic stabilization of the economy. The macroeconomic stability
is very important in order to ensure the economic growth and poverty
alleviation. Bad fiscal policies could easily destabilize the macro
economy of any country. Basically and more frequently for countries like
ours, this destabilization of macro situation do happen as a result of
the destabilization of the exchange rate. This means we must focus on a
foreign exchange rate based macro-economic stability. From the budget of
2017, the Ministry of Finance has done its part towards achieving the
said goal. If the budget is implemented and the monetary authorities
namely the Central Bank does it part duly the country will see that
there will be no balance of payment runs in the year 2017 and as a
result there will be no sudden devaluations of rupee. This could be a
bad news for the Joint Opposition.
However, I do not necessarily agree that the reduction of the budget
deficit to 4.6% of GDP is an essential part or element in making the
macroeconomic stability. In fact this budget deficit is less than 0.1%
from what the IMF had recommended. It intimates that the government
thinks that by lowering deficit spending (or budget deficit) is good for
economic growth. This notion is wrong. I would advise that the
government must increase the deficit spending financed from domestic
borrowing to the maximum point where it could achieve the exchange rate
stability. This is important, especially in a period of reconciliation
after a long war. If the government thinks it would destabilize the
exchange rate if deficit spending exceeds more than 4.6%, this level of
budget deficit is okay. Yet, I prefer to accept the IMF figure of 4.7%
in this regard and it could even be more.

