Eastern Eye (UK)

Call for tax reform

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SRI LANKA Should stamp out corruption and substantia­lly raise taxes to rescue its economy, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said last Thursday (30) after bailout talks with the bankrupt island nation.

Representa­tives from the global lender of last resort concluded a 10-day visit to the capital Colombo to map out a resolution to the south Asian country’s unpreceden­ted economic crisis.

Their meetings follow months of lengthy blackouts and days-long queues for petrol as a financial crunch leaves Sri Lanka without the funds to meet its energy needs.

But the IMF said more work was needed to set the nation’s finances right and repair its runaway fiscal deficit before a deal could be struck on a funding arrangemen­t to address its balance of payments crisis.

“Given the low level of revenues, farreachin­g tax reforms are urgently needed,” the lender said in a statement.

Sri Lanka needed to “reduce corruption vulnerabil­ities”, contain spiralling inflation and bring an end to costly energy subsidies that had long been a drain on the government budget without hurting more vulnerable citizens, the statement added.

“The authoritie­s have made considerab­le progress in formulatin­g their economic reform program and we are looking forward to continuing the dialogue with them,” it said.

Sri Lanka has already reversed drastic 2019 tax cuts introduced by president Gotabaya Rajapaksa which have been blamed for precipitat­ing the economic crisis.

It has also scaled back its energy subsidies, with the cost of fuel rising by up to 400 per cent this year, and in April the government defaulted on its $51 billion (£43bn) foreign debt.

The island nation is almost completely without petrol and the government has shut down non-essential public services in an effort to conserve fuel.

Protests have demanded Rajapaksa’s resignatio­n for the government’s mismanagem­ent of the crisis, but the president has so far refused to stand down.

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