The Economy: Chickens come home to roost
March 5, 2016, 7:07 pm
The capital gains tax was introduced along with the quasi-socialist reforms of the S.W.R.D.Bandaranaike government and abolished as the free market economic policy became the norm. Capital gains are the profits that an investor realizes when he sells the capital asset for a price that is higher than the purchase price and capital gains taxes are only triggered when an asset is realized, not while it is held by an investor. An investor can own shares that appreciate every year, but the investor does not incur a capital gains tax on the shares until they are sold. The government needs to demonstrate its ability to pay back the loans they expect to obtain from the IMF as well as on the open market – hence this increase in taxes. In the meantime the corporate income tax rate is also to be retained at the previous level of around 28% without being reduced to 15% as proposed in the Budget for 2016.
The large private business houses have been having a bad time since the present government came into power. Last year, all these conglomerates had to fork out amounts ranging from hundreds of millions to two or three billion rupees each depending on their profits for the past year – for no reason all except to keep the yahapalana government afloat. They had to pay this one off super gains tax over and above their usual tax commitments for that year. This amounts to the same kind of expropriation that was practiced by the 1970 SLFP led government of Mrs Sirima Bandaranaike. At that time whole businesses or estates were taken over by the government. The only difference this time is that the establishments themselves were not taken over, but huge amounts of money equivalent to the value of many smaller businesses have been taken by the government.