Oman Daily Observer

Sri Lankan govt boosts spending in budget targeting voters

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka on Tuesday boosted spending on state employees, pensioners and the armed forces, and promised many rural infrastruc­ture projects in a 2019 budget to woo voters before two elections, following a period of political instabilit­y.

Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a raised taxes on the tourism sector, vehicles, liquor and cigarettes to meet government spending before a presidenti­al election later this year and a general election in 2020.

He introduced a special allowance for all public sector employees and revised payments for pensioners. Public sector workers and pensioners account for 15 per cent of voters.

Samaraweer­a also promised many rural infrastruc­ture projects and to safeguard lower-income earners.

“We will invest more in social infrastruc­ture and a social safety net,” Samaraweer­a told the parliament while delivering the budget with the theme of “Enterprise Sri Lanka — Empowering the People and Nurturing the Poor”.

The government, led by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, has come under heavy criticism for higher taxes, and tight monetary and fiscal policies that have crimped growth to a 17-year low and led to a sharp fall in the rupee.

Wickremesi­nghe was reinstated as prime minister after a 51-day political face-off with President Maithripal­a Sirisena, who had sacked him, but was forced by a court ruling to reinstate him.

Samaraweer­a set an ambitious fiscal deficit goal of 4.4 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), compared with 5.3 per cent in 2018.

“Achieving 4.4 per cent deficit target will be challengin­g and an uphill task,” said Danushka Samarasing­he, CEO at Softlogic Capital Markets.

Trisha Peiris, product head at Frontier Research, said the budget “appears to target the middle-class segment more while proposing several loan schemes to the lower income earners”.

The government aims to increase spending by 13 per cent in 2019 and increase tax revenue by 21.3 per cent compared with 2018.

Budget documents show the government plans to borrow 450 billion rupees ($2.51 billion) via foreign commercial borrowing.

 ??  ?? Sri Lankan Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a shows a briefcase containing the 2019 budget proposals as he arrives at the parliament in Colombo on Tuesday. — Reuters
Sri Lankan Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a shows a briefcase containing the 2019 budget proposals as he arrives at the parliament in Colombo on Tuesday. — Reuters

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