
Unfair Charge
Telecom analysts pointed out that at one network where the average spend per pre-paid user was just 311 rupees, taxes would take away 110 rupees.
Hakeem told parliament that a 7.5 percent proposed charge had now been increased to 10 percent following discussion with President Mahinda Rajapaksa last night and the fixed levy had been abandoned.
"I think that the removal of the regressive tax is a great benefit for the bottom of the pyramid, but of course the government should not be taxing industries just because they do well," says Rohan Samarjiva, a former telecom regulator who led a campaign against the levy.
"And government should not discriminate between mobile and fixed telecommunications."
The government already charges value added tax on phone calls.
Samarajiva in his 'Choices' column on Lanka Business Online (See Choices - Goose or Eggs) said that the unfair levy would prevent the spread of phones to the poorest segments of Sri Lankan society where higher income persons already own phones.
"The regressive, fixed tax of 50 rupees per SIM is absolutely wrong," he wrote.
"Taking 50 rupees from a person paying 311 rupees per month as well as from a person with a 5,000 rupee phone bill is unfair.
"The effect is a 16 percent tax on the low spender and a 1 percent tax on the high spender. That is why these kinds of taxes are called regressive."
Extravagant Government
Sri Lanka's cash-strapped government which hired 42,000 new staff into its already bloated public sector and is planning to hire 20,000 more this year, is now hard pressed to find cash to foot the bill.
State salaries and pensions ate up 57 percent of tax revenues in the first five months of 2007.
Sri Lanka also spends billions on various politically motivated subsidies including energy and fertilizer. Subsidies and transfers now consume the equivalent of 5.4 percent of the economy, a minister told reporters today.
Another bill introduced in parliament this week jacked up a levy on vehicles from 2.5 to 5.0 percent. The tax came just months after the government allowed 28,000 public servants to import tax-slashed vehicles.
Sri Lanka's politicians led by the Marxist nationalist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna who engineered an expansion of the public sector and unprecedented energy subsidies oppose increases in value added tax (VAT).
The party has also publicly opposed the new telecom levies, as has the main opposition United National Party which has a reputation for fiscal prudence and low inflation. The party originally brought in the 2.5 percent usage charge on mobile phone bills.
Tax Mess
Since 2004, when Sri Lanka's fiscal policy started to go off the rails, inflation has been touching the high teens and the rupee has been steadily falling as the government printed increasingly large volumes of money to fund its unsustainable budget deficit.
Sri Lanka's VAT framework is now convoluted, loaded with exemptions and multiple rates ranging from 18 percent to 5 percent.
As a result the finance ministry is now resorting to cess levies and other turnover based non-recoverable taxes such as the 10 percent telecom levy.
"The fairest way to collect these taxes is by increasing the VAT rate and removing exemptions, not by imposing various kinds of unfair and counterproductive taxes on arbitrarily selected industries and customers," Samarajiva pointed out.
In another irony, while the poorer prepaid mobile users are getting slapped with new taxes, a consumer lobby took the largest fixed operator in the country to court and extracted an 8 percent reduction on fixed access bills.
Like during late Sirima B's time, ordinary people should be taxed heavily for indulging in luxuries.
They should learn to do with basic requirements. Even wheat flour bread is becoming a luxury item in Slanka.
- collections is easy
-40% of population covered and moving to 60%(largets base)
- everyone is included - all govenment servents , doctors
- easy to colloect the cash, and quick collection, without any use of government resources......
- equitable tax, with lower people paying lower tax..........
they should have started this earlier.... just that we should be worried about the money collected...........
other than that, we shouldnt complain about paying this tax
tax on mobile calls??? Heard they were even talking about tax on noise levels & tax on Garbage while they carry on regardless amassing wealth and running the county to the ground..
Any one who can is leaving this mess and starting up overseas -- idiots like us only will stay back( in this beautifu Island) to bite the dust...
see
http://www.lirneasia.net/2007/09/the-case-against-punitive-taxation-of-mobile-users-in-sri-lanka/
The mismagement of the economy is incredible ! Are we so placid adn so laid back that we will let these idiots continue to use us as scape goats for their lack of grey matter ?
What the government is telling the business community and the ppl of this country is that they will tax any industry that is doing well, so just run everything down to the ground ! In the mean time our glorious leaders and their brats can continue to bring down porsche cayennes and Aston Martin DB9's!
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