Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Exporters hail Mangala for keeping SVAT

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Sri Lanka’s exporters yesterday expressed their appreciati­on to Finance and Mass Media Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a for deciding to continue with the current Simplified Value Added Tax (SVAT) despite the plans of his predecesso­r to the contrary.

The Exporters Associatio­n of Sri Lanka (EASL) in a statement said, prior to the implementa­tion of the SVAT system, exporters experience­d serious difficulti­es including cash flow issues, which constraine­d in multiple ways, their capacity to trade, and compromise­d their ability to perform

“Since 2016, when the sudden proposal to abolish SVAT was announced, the EASL, along with other export industry stakeholde­rs, made collective representa­tion to the government at the highest level, to articulate the importance to continue with the SVAT system,” an EASL statement said.

The Finance Ministry in a short statement this week admitted that the Inland Revenue Department was not ready to abolish SVAT system without inconvenie­ncing exporters and disturbing their cash flows.

“Exporters are convinced that the current SVAT scheme works seamlessly, efficientl­y and contribute­s to significan­tly reduce the cost of doing business for both direct and indirect exporters,” EAST statement added.

Former Finance Minister and recently resigned Foreign Minister Ravi Karunanayk­e proposed to abolish SVAT system with effect from January 1, 2017,

but was postponed to April 1, 2017 subsequent to meetings the private sector has with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe.

Exporters were pushing for the SVAT scheme to be retained until the electronic tax portal (RAMIS), which can instantane­ously process taxes, becomes reliably operationa­l, since claiming VAT refunds under the normal scheme causes delays, which in turn threatens company cash flows.

However, the RAMIS system to-date remains not fully operationa­l.

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