ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka opposition leader Sajith Premadasa has criticised the cash-strapped government’s tax policy, cost-reflective utility tariffs and the Central Bank’s decision to maintain interest rates at their current level, proposing that stolen money be recovered to increase state revenue.
Speaking at an election rally in Thambuttegama on Sunday February 12, Premadasa intimated that an unholy alliance between the United National Party (UNP) headed by President Ranil Wickremesinghe, the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) and its architect Basil Rajapaksa was burdening the public with high income tax.
“The ali pohottu kaputu government is burdening the people with taxes. We hear they’re planning to impose a tax on people who earn 45,000 rupees a month too. Just great,” said Premadasa addressing a large crowd of Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) supporters.
The opposition and SJB leader was likely referring to reports that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had asked the government to impose taxes on anyone who earns above 41,667 rupees a month as a condition for a much-needed 2.9 billion US dollar extended fund facility. However, the tax threshold remains at 100,000 rupees a month and there is no indication yet that it will be lowered.
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Premadasa also claimed that the government plans to increase electricity tariffs twice more and that one of the proposed reforms will see utility rates increased by 75 percent. He also chastised the government for a recent hike in cooking gas and petrol prices.
The Central Bank’s decision to hold the policy rate corridor was also called into question by the opposition leader.
“Can you go to a bank and take a loan now? The interest rate is 30 to 35 percent. How do you run a factory? How do you run a business?” he said.
In its monthly monetary policy review in late January, the Central Bank said it was “imperative to ensure that monetary conditions remain sufficiently tight to rein in inflationary pressures.”
“Such tight monetary conditions, together with the tight fiscal policy, are expected to adjust inflation expectations downward, enabling the Central Bank to bring inflation rates towards the desired levels by end 2023, thereby restoring economic and price stability over the medium term,” the Central Bank said in a statement.
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Sri Lanka central bank holds policy corridor, expects market rates to fall
Premadasa did not elaborate on the merits of loosening the monetary policy at this juncture or of the SJB’s proposals for personal income tax, but proposed instead that the government take into custody those accused of bringing the country to financial ruin. “Take our stolen money back” was a popular slogan during the Aragalaya street protests in 2022 which has since been appropriated by opposition parties in the run-up to the upcoming local government elections. However, neither the SJB nor the leftist National People’s Power (NPP) has spelt out the mechanism for doing so.
“They’re saying all of this (increasing taxes, utility tariffs, etc) needs to be done since the government has no revenue. I say to this crooked ali pohottu kaputu government, if you need more revenue, please catch the crooks that bankrupted the country,” said Premadasa. (Colombo/Feb13/2023)