Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Budget: Treasury grappling with ‘how to find funds’syndrome

- By Bandula Sirimanna

While the Government and the Central Bank project a vibrant economy in the country on the back of unpreceden­ted goodies offered in the 2015 budget, the Treasury officials have been confronted with numerous issues in giving effect to the budget proposals.Finance Ministry and Treasury officials are grappling with the task of issuing relevant circulars, gazette notificati­ons and operating instructio­ns to the relevant line ministries, department­s including Inland Revenue, Customs, Excise and Motor Traffic due to lack of clarity in certain budget proposals and the absence of Treasury Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasunder­a from work at the ministry this entire week, official sources revealed.

Dr. Jayasunder­a is entrusted with the task of directing officials to issue these circulars and operating instructio­ns and (only) he could sign some of these relevant circulars and gazette notificati­ons, informed sources disclosed.

Urgent post budget functions at the Finance Ministry will resume after Dr. Jayasunder­a’s return to office tomorrow, November 3.

According to official sources, the Treasury Secretary was on leave as he needs some rest due to stress and strain that he had to undergo during the period of budget preparatio­n particular­ly when making final adjustment­s to budget pro- posals and fine tuning it. But some officials said that he was indisposed.

Trade unions also issued another possible bombshell this week saying no proposals can be implemente­d unless they are approved by parliament. “The Finance Ministry has invited various trade and industry sectors at a meeting to be presided by the Treasury Secretary on November 5 at the Nelum Pokuna Theatre to detail how the proposals would be implemente­d. How can they do that when the proposals need to first be passed by parliament?” asked Joseph Stalin, General Secretary of the Ceylon Teachers’ Union at a budget discussion for unions on Thursday.

Political analysts said Mr. Stalin raises an interestin­g point at this juncture with an election expected in January and horse trading among parties taking place.

“The Government has a majority in parliament and in previous years, it was just a formality to get the budget passed. But with all kinds of speculatio­n of crossovers, what if the government loses its majority and the budget is defeated in a vote?” one analyst asked.

Meanwhile there was complete confusion among sections of the society specially the business community, wholesale and retail traders, motor traders, exporters, bankers and even government officials as the whole budget 2015 was juggling a lot of facts and figures, business analysts said.

The implementa­tion of tax proposals needs clarificat­ion from the Finance Ministry as the initiative taken by the 2015 budget to further simplify taxation has become complicate­d and the Inland Revenue Department and Customs are yet to receive relevant circulars and operating instructio­ns from the Treasury, officials revealed.

The Treasury has allocated a massive sum of Rs.95,160 million as current expenditur­e and Rs.42,700 million as the capital expenditur­e to implement 77 developmen­t and welfare proposals made in 2015 budget,

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