Govt takes extraordinary measures to boost revenue collection  

Date:

The new Government will be taking tough measures  such as an increase in tax revenue without hitting low-income earners, radical reforms to reduce the size and increase efficiency in public service.

It will expedite  necessary action  to introduce reforms for state enterprises and end rampant corruption and the power of mafias, improving public welfare and ensuring a safety net for the poor and down trodden, official source said.

 The Inland Revenue Department (IRD) has called on large banks, finance companies and private sector companies to pay their first quarter taxes upfront, ahead of the due date, as the Government is facing a cash-flow problem in paying public sector salaries.

The Treasury has requested the IRD to ask these large corporate taxpayers to cough up the money due to the difficulty in finding the funds to pay salaries, Finance Ministry sources said.

Senior IRD Commissioner and IRD Commissioners’ Association President Sarath Abeyratne confirmed the IRD was seeking the support of the large-scale taxpayers to make a “goodwill gesture” towards a Government that was in a financial crisis. 

So far the Treasury and the Central Bank have been printing money to the tune of several billions resulting in sharply rising inflation and the cost of living index skyrocketing.

About Rs 59 billion had been collected from several large companies with a turnover of more than Rs. two billion following the then Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa’s budget proposal. 

Mr. Abeyratne said that these companies “promptly complied” with the IRD’s request to pay the surcharge on time, and added that the department hoped to collect about Rs. 100 billion from this once-and-for-all surcharge.

The next date of payment of the surcharge tax would be during June-July this year for the companies which had not responded to IRD’s call, he added.

The private sector has already complained that retrospective taxes, however, undermine the rule of just law and bring in uncertainty to the business environment.

A 2.5 percent ‘social security’ tax will be charged from companies above Rs. 120 million in turnover with effect from April 01. The social security tax is expected to bring in Rs 140 billion.

Meanwhile, the Central Bank is continuing to print rupee notes containing the signatures of Basil Rajapaksa, the former minister, and former Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal, a request under the Right to Information Act has revealed.

The order has been placed and production is ongoing, the regulator said, adding that the notes (and the signatures on them) are dated September 15, 2021.

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Claims on Renewable Energy Projects by MP Mujibur Rahman Contradicted by Official Procurement Process

Samagi Jana Balawegaya Parliamentarian Mujibur Rahman delivered an emotional...

The United States has decided to donate 10 helicopters to Sri Lanka for use in disaster response operations.

By: Rashika HennayakeJanuary 07, Colombo (LNW): The United States has decided...

Sri Lanka Tourism Chief Bets on Data as Tourist industry Faces Reality Check

At a time when Sri Lanka’s tourism industry is...

EU Grant Fuels Sri Lanka’s Green Shift in Agriculture

Sri Lanka has taken a significant step toward environmentally...