COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s budget for 2017 is broadly in line with the targets set out under its IMF programme, and contains a number of positive measures to boost the very weak revenue base, according to Fitch Ratings.
However, the ratings agency believes that the impact of the revenue reforms will depend on implementation; and some of the budget assumptions look optimistic, posing risks to the projections.
The 2017 budget targets a fiscal deficit equivalent to 4.6% of GDP, down from an expected 5.4% in 2016 and 7.4% in 2015, when the deficit widened mainly as a result of sharp public-sector wage rises.
Fiscal consolidation will be helped by tax reforms that should go some way to bolstering the weak revenue base, which is a key reason for the sovereign’s weak fiscal finances.
The reforms include a hike in the VAT rate from 11% to 15%, along with tax measures announced in the budget – such as a 10% capital gains tax that is scheduled to be introduced next year and an increase in the top personal income tax rate.







