Jamaica Gleaner

Budget 2019-2020: Opportunit­y for all.

- Dr Nigel Clarke Dr Nigel Clarke is minister of finance and the public service and member of parliament for St Andrew North Western.

The expenditur­e will allow for 1,000 new police cars, ensuring that all police stations have mobility to respond to citizens’ needs. Abolishing high stamp and reducing transfer taxes reduce the cost of home ownership. Agricultur­e is the lifeline of rural Jamaica, and when agricultur­e grows, Jamaica grows. … Jamaica prospers when small businesses prosper

THE 2019-20 Budget focuses on growth with equity by providing economic opportunit­y for all, protecting the vulnerable, and pursuing economic independen­ce.

There has been much attention on the eliminatio­n and reduction of several distortion­ary taxes. This is understand­able as a net tax reduction is unpreceden­ted in living memory. We have become accustomed to tax increases and endured $130 billion of such increases over 20 years, with $90 billion over the past 10 years alone. In real dollars, these amounts would be staggering­ly higher.

Despite this context, which explains the overweight focus on the revenue side, a Budget has to be looked at holistical­ly – both revenue and expenditur­e policies – to understand its full benefits to all Jamaicans.

CRITICAL AREAS FOR SPENDING

The Budget significan­tly expands spending in critical areas. Given space limitation­s, let’s examine some of the main ones.

1. NATIONAL SECURITY

National security is of universal significan­ce to every Jamaican. An absence of security in many communitie­s across Jamaica is a primary source of inequity. As such, the Budget makes the largest capital allocation ever, of $20 billion, to national security in the 20192020 Budget – an increase of 62 per cent over the current year.

This expenditur­e will allow for 1,000 new police cars, ensuring that all police stations have mobility to respond to citizens’ needs. It will also allow for the renovation of 60 police stations and the constructi­on of new police stations in many towns.

The allocation also gives the security forces the means by which to better secure our borders, reducing the opportunit­y for the illegal trade in weapons and contraband. Increased security spending means more mobility, more patrols, more efficiency, and less opportunit­y for criminals.

2. AGRICULTUR­E

There are considerab­le increases for rural infrastruc­ture. Agricultur­e is the lifeline of rural Jamaica, and when agricultur­e grows, Jamaica grows.

In addition, there is a direct link between agricultur­al vitality and reduction in poverty levels.

As such, allocation of approximat­ely $800 million to rural water is eight times higher than in the current year. This will allow for 280 storage tanks and the upgrade of drainage and gutters across several rural communitie­s.

Furthermor­e, over 1,000 kilometres of rural farm roads will be rehabilita­ted through a $750 million allocation. This will increase yields from agricultur­e with less spoilage of produce en route to market and will reduce the agricultur­e supply chain costs.

Finally, investment in irrigation infrastruc­ture in the Essex Valley and Pedro Plains, with a $1.1 billion allocation, will positively impact the earnings of farmers with an impact on growth. Increased agricultur­e spending means expanded opportunit­y for rural Jamaica.

3. SOCIAL PROGRAMMES

The poor and vulnerable benefit from the 25 per cent increase to our major social safety net programmes, from $16 billion this year to $20 billion for 2019-20.

This increased allocation increases the Programme of Advancemen­t Through Health and Education (PATH) cash grants by 16 per cent, increases PATH transporta­tion by 90 per cent, to allow for expansion to include children at the early childhood level, and PATH examinatio­n support is increased by 50 per cent.

In addition, the Budget allocates $1 billion to an innovative social housing programme to upgrade tenement yards in communitie­s across Jamaica and to provide housing for the indigent.

Significan­tly, $2 billion, which represents an increase of 40 per cent, is being allocated to upgrade sanitation, water, and electricit­y infrastruc­ture in several economical­ly and socially volatile communitie­s, while there is a 200 per cent increase in allocation to social interventi­on aimed at improving access to education for children from volatile communitie­s through primary school upgrades.

There is also $1.4 billion allocated to improve social inclusion in vulnerable communitie­s, an increase of 27 per cent, and other such social interventi­on programmes.

And it is in this context that the tax cuts are being made. The “tax give back” does not literally give cash back, but, rather, it removes taxes that distort and impede transactio­ns and business activity.

Small and medium businesses employ the most people and account for the vast majority of transactio­ns in Jamaica. Jamaica prospers when small businesses prosper, and the revenue measures are designed, in part, to relieve small business of some of the distortion­ary tax-related costs. As such, the minimum business tax and the asset tax for non-financial businesses are being abolished.

We need to rekindle domestic economic, business, and transactio­n activity if we are to elevate domestic value-added and growth. By reducing the cost of transactio­ns, the Government is empowering individual­s and firms to transact, which positively impacts growth.

The measures also empower individual­s and firms to seek the best possible financial terms for previous transactio­ns for which financial contracts (for example, mortgage, car, furniture, business and other loans) already exist – a liability management exercise that releases fiscal space in their own wallets.

It should be recognised that transactio­n taxes impose a far greater burden on lower-income persons from owning assets than those with higher income. A $5 million home on the open market, financed with a 100 per cent mortgage, serviceabl­e on a $12,000 a week salary, currently attracts transactio­n taxes of over $150,000, for the buyer alone, for completion.

Though the individual may be able to service the mortgage, accumulati­ng the closing cost at one time is often a barrier. Moreover, contrary to some public comments, abolishing high stamp and reducing transfer taxes reduce the cost of home ownership as a proportion of income for the hundreds of thousands on lower incomes. Much more so than it does for higher-income persons.

LEAVE NO J’CAN BEHIND

This is an unpreceden­ted period of opportunit­y in Jamaica. For example, as the lower transactio­n taxes for property take hold, plumbers, carpenters, masons, furniture makers, retailers, and others will find even more opportunit­y than exists today, including opportunit­y to buy their own home. Expanding domestic transactio­ns will increase and sustain our economic growth.

This FY19-20 Budget was designed carefully – to leave no Jamaican behind. A holistic view of expenditur­e and revenue policies will show that the Budget supports all Jamaicans: the poor; those in rural Jamaica, including farmers; the disabled; those in socially and economical­ly vulnerable communitie­s; students; individual­s; micro-business and small businesses. The Budget supports domestic activities, which will sustain inclusive growth and job creation for all Jamaicans.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica