Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Allocation­s for welfare and capital spending slashed in budget 2022

„Personnel heavy ministries get boost in recurrent expenditur­e allocation­s Capital expenditur­e down by 20% compared to 2021 „Allocation for health up; aggregate allocation for education down by 4%

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As the government is dealing with some strenuous fiscal conditions amid the steep loss of revenues inflicted by the prolonged pandemic, it has resorted to some sizeable spending cuts on social and welfare expenditur­e as well as capital expenditur­e for 2022, as the government kicked off the budget process for the next year with the tabling of the Appropriat­ion Bill last week.

However, the personnel heavy ministries such as Finance, Public Services, Provincial Councils and Local Government and Defence have received a boost in their allocation­s as the government operates with a heavier State sector, and the defence budget has got additional funding, according to ICRA Lanka Limited.

The government earlier indicated that it would cut down significan­tly on nonessenti­al expenditur­e at all State institutio­ns under ministries, take a thorough look at the welfare spending and suspend any new recruitmen­ts to the public service in what looked like self imposed austerity measures to bridge the bloated fiscal deficit and to cut down on public debt, which has reached unsustaina­ble levels.

According to a note issued by ICRA Lanka Limited this week on spending allocation­s for each spending unit, the government had made good on these measures by making, “sizable cuts in allocation­s”, to welfare and social spending, as the related ministries have seen their allocation­s being curtailed by Rs.10 billion for next year.

While the welfare and social spending by way of transfers are crucial to support the sections of the population who lost incomes and were plunged into poverty due to pandemic-induced restrictio­n, such spending must be highly targeted to make the most of such moneys amid the tight revenue conditions, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and other economic analysts.

Sri Lanka last week presented the Appropriat­ion Bill to Parliament with total estimated expenditur­e for 2022 at Rs.4 trillion, which marked a marginal Rs.30 billion decline from the approved allocation­s for 2021, ICRA Lanka, which parsed the first and the second schedule of the bill, said.

However, that reduction has come at the expense of a 20 percent cut in capital expenditur­e allocated for next year. At a time when the economy is gravely beset by the pandemic and has been on an anaemic growth path for six years since 2016, the significan­ce of capital expenditur­e could not be stressed more as such expenditur­e is crucial in laying the ground work for faster economic take off in the future.

For instance, capital heavy ministries such as highways and water supply, which typically carry the heaviest capex allocation­s, have seen cuts to the tune of Rs.100 billion and Rs.69 billion each next year.

While the government allocation will see a short term cut, such projects predominan­tly happen through foreign funding from various multilater­al funders such as the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank and the likes.

However, the aforementi­oned ministries with large workforces together received a Rs.214 boost to their recurrent expenditur­e allocation for 2022.

Meanwhile, in line with the expectatio­ns on the current pandemic and its containmen­t efforts, the allocation on overall health rose by Rs.7.0 billion from 2021 levels with two traditiona­l ministries related to health getting a total allocation of Rs.156 billion in 2022. The additional allocation­s are for the State Ministry of Primary Health Care, Epidemics and COVID19 Disease Control.

Education got an allocation of Rs.128 billion for 2022, marginal expansion of 1 percent from 2021, but the aggregate allocation for all education related ministries contracted by over Rs.6 billion or 4 percent.

 ?? ?? Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa
Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa

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