Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

MANGALA SAYS NO REAL IMPACT ON THE SECTOR

Tax exemptions for the agricultur­e sector

-

Former Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a yesterday said that the recently announced package of tax exemptions for the agricultur­e sector had little or no real impact on the sector. “The purported Ministry of Finance has announced a package of tax exemptions for the agricultur­e sector. However, the announced measures have little or no real impact on the sector. Most small-scale farmers do not fall into the bracket of income tax payers. Data over the last few years show that revenue collected from all agricultur­e-based income taxes accounts for approximat­ely 0.03% of total government tax revenue – this is a negligible figure and suggests that the removal of this will not have a material impact on the agricultur­e sector and the productivi­ty thereof,” the former minister said in a statement.

He further said that the real requiremen­t for the agricultur­e sector in Sri Lanka is access to affordable finance, good quality irrigation, quality storage and warehousin­g, and access to markets.through the Enterprise Sri Lanka programme we initiated several loans schemes

The proposed tax break will not address any of these critical issues in agricultur­e, it will however benefit the large plantation companies and commercial agricultur­al players, who could afford to pay taxes anyway

including Ran Aswenna (interest rate 6.8%), Govi Navoda (interest rate 3.4%), that cover the entire agricultur­e value chain.through the ‘Gampereliy­a’ programme we initiated the rehabilita­tion of small irrigation tanks around the country that had been neglected for decades, leaving farmers so vulnerable to the droughts of the last 2 years.

“The proposed tax break will not address any of these critical issues in agricultur­e, it will however benefit the large plantation companies and commercial agricultur­al players, who could afford to pay taxes anyway. Therefore, in effect the agricultur­e relief package provides a tax break for the corporate sector but provides no benefit to the small farmer.tax breaks are lazy, populist measures that do not address the real underlying issues of a sector. The tax exemptions for agricultur­e will however raise other questions. What about support for the other small-scale industries? SME carpenters, SME retailers, SME manufactur­ers, SME constructi­on sector, SME fisheries? Do they not deserve tax relief? Why just agricultur­e? Perhaps since it is a sector with a large number of individual­s of which very few actually benefit from the proposed tax break.the tax package also includes measures to reduce taxes for agricultur­al processing which will benefit large scale, highly profitable rice millers.

The income tax policy of our government was based on levels of profit, and not based on favouring certain sectors. Accordingl­y, whether you are in agricultur­e or in IT, if you make a profit over a certain level, you pay a tax of 14%, whereas if you do not make a profit you do not pay tax whichever sector you are in. Our income tax policy was based on fairness and equity, whilst also recognisin­g the need for profitable companies to contribute to government revenue to fund services such as free education, health, and infrastruc­ture which they also used in creating such profits. As per what is proposed by the purported Finance Ministry, a large plantation company and profitable multinatio­nals in the agricultur­e sector will not pay any taxes, whereas a local constructi­on company would pay 28% tax. This is an unfair proposal which will have no real impact on the agricultur­e sector, the statement added.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka