Eastern Eye (UK)

Sri Lanka raises taxes

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CASH-STRAPPED Sri Lanka on Tuesday (31) announced steep, across-the-board tax hikes to shore up revenue as the country suffers its worst economic downturn and seeks an IMF bailout.

The value-added tax (VAT) applied on almost all goods and services was raised from 8.0 per cent to 12 per cent with immediate effect, while corporate taxes were also increased from 24 to 30 per cent. The personal income tax exemption threshold was lowered from 3 million Sri Lankan rupees (£6,609) a year to 1.8 million rupees.

The increases were a rollback of the generous cuts ordered by president Gotabaya Rajapaksa soon after he won the November 2019 elections.

Prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, who is also the finance minister, said Rajapaksa’s tax cuts cost the state some 800 billion rupees annually and widened the budget deficit sharply.

Internatio­nal rating agencies, as well as independen­t economists, have pointed to Rajapaksa’s fiscal policy as having fuelled the current financial crisis.

Wickremesi­nghe, an opposition legislator, was made prime minister this month. His predecesso­r and the president’s elder brother Mahinda stepped down after months of anti-government protests turned deadly.

The south Asian nation is in talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for a bailout after running out of dollars to pay even for essential imports such as oil, food and medicines.

Sri Lanka has also defaulted on its $51bn foreign debt. Wickremesi­nghe said he was also removing several tax breaks granted to companies in recent years. The government did not say how much it will raise from the new tax measures.

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