IMF says Sri Lanka needs to collect more taxes
Sri Lanka has so far failed to make enough progress in boosting tax collection and other economic reforms for the International Monetary Fund to release a second tranche of $330 million in the country’s $2.9 billion bailout from bankruptcy, the IMF said in an Associated Press report.
An IMF team led by Peter Breuer and Katsiaryna Svirydzenka concluded a visit to the island and said in a statement that discussions would continue an agreement on how to keep up the momentum of reforms, and to unlock the second installment of funding that was due at the end of this month.
“Despite early signs of stabilization, full economic recovery is not yet assured,” the statement said, adding that the country’s accumulation of reserves has slowed due to lower-than-projected gains in the collection of taxes.
“To increase revenues and signal better governance, it is important to strengthen tax administration, remove tax exemptions, and actively eliminate tax evasion,” the statement said.
Sri Lanka plunged into its worst economic crisis last year, suffering severe shortages and drawing strident protests that led to the ouster of then-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
It declared bankruptcy in April 2022 with more than $83 billion in debt — more than half of it to foreign creditors.
The IMF agreed in March of this year to a $2.9 billion bailout package as Sri Lanka negotiates with its creditors to restructure the debt, aiming to reduce it by $17 billion. It released an initial $330 million in funding for Sri Lanka shortly after reaching that agreement.
W.A. Wijewardena, an economic analyst and former deputy governor of Sri Lanka’s central bank, said this week’s failure to reach an agreement with the IMF cannot yet be called a setback for the government, but that it will be difficult for it to raise more revenue while looking for additional ways to cut expenditures.
Many professionals in Sri Lanka are demanding a reduction in income taxes, and some have left the country over the issue.