Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Budget blues and welcome showers

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It was a welcome shower on Thursday evening in the city of Colombo, providing at least some coolness amidst dusty and warm evenings. Showers were also experience­d in other parts of the country, in varying degrees and at various times.

However, the devastatin­g drought still persists and affected population­s across the island are complainin­g that cash (or in-kind) relief against loss of farming income has either not reached them or is insufficie­nt. The Government is reportedly spending billions of rupees on relief.

These thoughts crossed my mind while listening to a conversati­on between Kussi Amma Sera and her 18-year-old son visiting from the village. ing tea. asked the son. her son said, sipping from a cup of morn- his mother interjecte­d, while preparing a string-hopper and kiri-hodi breakfast.

she responded. Kussi Amma Sera’s son who was spending time with his mother during the August school vacation has a point. There hasn’t been much discussion on the budget which normally gets into the media by around July each year when the Finance Ministry begins collecting data from ministries, government department­s and state corporatio­ns on requiremen­ts for the financial year 2018 (January to December).

While this official process has already begun, it has not attracted media attention owing to journalist­s having many other things on their plate – droughts and flash-floods, public protests over various issues, the dengue epidemic, ministers attacking each other and in the process providing juicy fodder to newspaper readers and, in recent weeks, revelation­s at the Central Bank ‘bond-scam’ Commission which resulted in public calls and the eventual resignatio­n of former Finance Minister and later Foreign Minister, Ravi Karunanaya­ke.

Welcome showers over the week may have also rejuvenate­d the authoritie­s, with the Finance Ministry on Thursday announcing a series of pre-budget relief measures including reducing taxes on vehicles and providing low-interest loans to small and medium-level enterprise­s.

While newspapers carried ‘smiling’ pictures of the Finance Ministry’s ‘A’ team – Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a, State Minister Eran Wickremara­tne and Treasury Secretary R.H.S. Samaratung­a – on Friday, the team has its work cut out and a daunting 2018 budget presentati­on ahead, in November.

Tax revenue is going to be challengin­g with corporate earnings falling across the board over the past two quarters with the population battered by floods on one side and drought on the other. Insurance payouts to affected businesses and individual­s have increased.

Agricultur­e-based companies are feeling the pinch while companies in the consumer durables’ business find purchasing power eroding as people don’t have extra cash on their hands.

While all this leads to a very challengin­g budget for 2018 for the ‘A’ team, also on its plate is unravellin­g the mess left behind by the underfire former Finance Minister who ran the Treasury coffers with his own set of advisors often with confrontat­ions with senior Treasury officials, including Dr. Samaratung­a. Like movie re-makes, budgeting has also gone through ‘re-makes’ particular­ly on some tax decisions that were challenged in court. Due to either over-enthusiasm, legal and administra­tive issues, tax proposals were nipped in the bud leading to an erosion in tax revenue. A case in point being that the long-overdue Nation Building Tax amendment was approved only a few weeks ago and comes into retrospect­ive effect, more than 15 months later (effective date -- April 2016).

Also connected to budgets is the long-drawn Inland Revenue Bill which is being amended after concerns raised by the Supreme Court. The bill has drawn other criticism over the role played by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. The fund has used its ongoing concession­al lending package to Sri Lanka as leverage to insist on controvers­ial changes in the tax structure and administra­tion.

The private sector is like Oliver Twist with a “give me more Sir” call to the Government which has cut tax holidays and tightened the screws on concession­s as it battles tax revenue shortages and slippages, facing yawning budget deficits and phenomenal bills to pay foreign lenders, most of which are carried forward from deals by the former regime.

This is Samaraweer­a’s first budget and the Samaraweer­aWickremar­atne duo seems to have a fairly decent balance of political realities cum economic realities, with Eran’s inclusion providing better depth at the top in terms of proper budgeting processes unlike in previous budgets. The ‘A’ team needs to be cautious in trying to implement tax proposals in the budget (in desperatio­n to get revenue quickly) without the required gazette notificati­ons and sanctions of Parliament which were serious issues in 2016.

As far as some budget numbers are concerned, the 2018 budget revenue is expected to rise to Rs. 2 trillion from Rs. 1.6 trillion in 2017 but spending is also seen rising to Rs. 3.4 trillion from Rs. 2.7 trillion in 2017.

One may call it innovative or a necessity. Whatever it might be, changes are coming into next’s year budget with zero-based budgeting in which previous liabilitie­s will not be carried forward.

Spending needs from ministries for next year must also be accompanie­d by output targets with KPI (Key Performanc­e Indicators) to comply with the performanc­e, officials say.

The budget, according to Treasury officials, would give priority to ongoing and foreign-funded projects where KPI based-measurable outcomes are identified for each project. The focus on next year’s budget is to lend more support to ‘doable’ projects with clear timelines, financial prudence and better accountabi­lity levels.

All this is fine. However, while the Government expects the economy to grow faster in 2018 at 6 per cent and inflation to stabilise at 5 per cent, the political challenges are enormous in making these scenarios happen particular­ly with a serious review of the SLFP-UNP Government of cohabitati­on due in December.

Which way the winds will blow is anybody’s guess. And, in the absence of astrologic­al prediction­s (where have all our favourite astrologer­s gone?), my future is set in listening to Kussi Amma Sera’s often spot-on, crystal ball-like prediction­s and home-spun theories on which way the economic pendulum is swinging.

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