බදු බර තවත් ඉහලට

topkollek

Well-known member
  • May 22, 2014
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    ┬┴┬┴┤(·_├┬┴┬┴
    500 was way off ban. 300-320 seems to be the proper number. Looks like they too had some agenda, just like that Hanke fucker. He kept putting our country down and dan pakaya saddayak ne.
    ඩොලර් එක අඩු වෙන්නෙ ඉම්පෝට් අඩු නිසා. ඉම්පෝට් අඩු බදු වැඩි නිසා.

    රනිල් ආර්ථිකය දියුණු කරපු නිසා නෙවෙයි.

    තව බදු වැඩි කරනකොට ඩොලර් එක 280ට බහින්නත් ඉඩ තියෙනවා.

    ඒකාලේ ඩොලර් එක තව වැඩිවෙයි කියල අනාවැකි කියපු අයට වැරදුනේ; උන් හිතුවේ නෑ බදු වැඩි කරලා මධ්‍යම පංතිය නැතිබංග කරයි කියල.
     

    jhnnwp

    Well-known member
  • Jan 6, 2012
    37,317
    25,876
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    • Sri Lanka must continue to raise taxes to achieve a budget surplus excluding interest payments in 2025 and beyond as per the bailout plan by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Bloomberg Intelligence said.
    • Debt restructuring is projected to reduce interest payments to 5.7% of GDP in 2032 from 7.9% in 2023.
    Sri Lanka must continue raising taxes to achieve a budget surplus excluding interest payments by 2025 and beyond, according to Bloomberg Intelligence's analysis of the IMF bailout plan. The country's debt cannot be reduced without maintaining a primary balance, with tax hikes and austerity measures helping to lower the deficit. Bloomberg Intelligence projects the budget shortfall will narrow to 3.8% of GDP by 2027, down from 8.7% in 2023. Excluding interest payments, the government is expected to achieve an average budget surplus of 2.3% of GDP over the next three years, compared to an estimated deficit of 0.6% of GDP in 2023. Moreover, the overall deficit will also shrink as borrowing costs decline, with debt restructuring expected to cut interest payments to 5.7% of GDP in 2032 from 7.9% in 2023, as bondholders take a 28.8% haircut.


    Bloomberg Intelligence further noted that Sri Lanka's fiscal policy has been restrictive since 2022, with tax revenues expected to rise to 12.1% of GDP in 2023 from 7.3% in 2022. A one-off expenditure of 450 billion rupees to recapitalize banks hit by bad loans during COVID and the debt crisis will likely result in a budget deficit excluding interest payments this year. Without this expenditure, the government would achieve a primary surplus of about 0.8% of GDP in 2023. The report suggests fiscal policy will remain contractionary in 2025, with further tax increases expected to ensure a primary budget surplus and initiate debt repayment. The IMF will continue lending only if these surpluses are maintained, limiting the government's ability to use fiscal policy to stimulate growth for the foreseeable future.

    https://publicfinance.lk/en/topics/must-continue-raising-taxes-to-stay-in-imf-prog-1715822941
    Minissu thiranaya karanna ona mehema wahallu wage innawada, niwahal wenna onada kiyala
     
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