Out-of-the box approach to raise taxes
The highest rate for employee income has been increased from 18 per cent to 36 per cent. It appears that the revenue planners of this country do not like to learn from developed countries how to recover the cost of government services to the people. They would instead stick to the traditional methods of taxing income earners. There are other ways of recovering the costs of the government and services. The only success story in this in Sri Lanka is the passport office. Changing from when people had to wait for several weeks to obtain a passport for a small fee, they successfully introduced the one day service for payment of a higher fee. If I am not mistaken, this system recovers the cost of the passport operation and possibly makes a surplus for the department. Apart from this, the Treasury or the revenue planners have been incapable of thinking outside the box, increasing the taxes on the private sector employees and exporters.
While none of the government sector employees pays any tax on their employment income, private sector employees (who do not qualify for any pension on retirement) have to pay taxes on their employment income. The unfair part of this is that private sector employees are made to subsidise the services the government provides for everyone.
As the current tax-free threshold is Rs. 100,000 a month, why cannot the income taxes apply to government sector employees as well? A salary of Rs. 100,000 is way more than what an average state sector employee gets. There would not be resistance from anyone as only the people with higher incomes get taxed as their counterparts in the private sector. A private sector employee making over Rs. 100,000 a month must pay the same prices for goods and services as a government sector employee would.
Most governments have three ways of recovering the expenditure. One is direct taxes such as VAT and income taxes. The second is indirect taxes, such as taxes on food and other imported items. The third, user–pay, is rarely used in Sri Lanka except for passports and motorway use. Unlike other taxes, the user-pay collection is not hated by the payers as they get a direct benefit for what they pay. Also, the user-pay method is a fair system of recovery of costs, unlike making few people subsidise the services mainly provided to others.
Following are a few examples where the system can be changed to shift to a user-pay method and reduce dependency on the higher income tax from the exporters and the private sector employees:
1. One of the most significant expenditures of the government is education and higher education. There are approximately 4.2 million schoolchildren between grades 1-12. It is fair to assume that at least 15 per cent of these students come from families with a monthly income of over Rs. 100,000 or assets over Rs. 25 million. If such children are made to pay Rs. 5,000 a month for education, the total revenue of the education department would be Rs. 37.8 billion a year. Parallel to this, the government could also impose a fee of Rs. 5,000 per child in every private school.
2. Except for the few motorways, all other roads do not recover any cost from the users for the usage. A per kilometre fee (say 1/3 of the per/km fee for motorways) for the use of the other major roads, the government could at least recover a part of the maintenance and renovation of roads. Rather than having staffed booths like on our highways, there are electronic user fee-collecting systems. An exemption could be given to passenger buses, motorcycles, three-wheelers, and lorries.
3. The government. also spends a considerable amount of money on the work done by the local government institutions. However, the rates charged by the local government institutions are negligible compared to the costs—an apartment or a house worth Rs. 50 million has to pay only Rs. 2,500 a year as rates.
The government could easily charge 0.5 per cent of the property’s value, which would be Rs. 250,000 a year or around Rs. 20,000 a month. That is 100 times the current rates. The government could allow the local bodies to retain 30 per cent of the amount they collect as rates and take the balance to cover the infrastructure cost they must maintain. Also, this will eliminate the costs the central government is paying to local governments. With the government’s infrastructure costs, the property value goes up substantially. Hence it is fair to recover 0.5 per cent a year on the property value as the owners could enjoy 99.5 per cent of the gain.
4. The present revenue license fee charged for motor vehicles is also way too small. For example, a Rs. 20 million worth of Land Cruiser Prado has to pay a license fee of Rs. 4,000.
This is compared to the famous SRI tax introduced by Dr. N.M Perera in the ’70s, where a car with a registration number starting from 6 SRI had to pay Rs. 600 a year. While the owner of a Prado would pay only Rs. 4000 for the revenue license, he would pay Rs. 300,000 to insure the same car for one year.
The RMV should charge at least 0.2 per cent for the revenue license, which will be Rs. 40,000 a year. The Automobile Association could easily provide the average valuation of each YOM (year of manufacture) and model of a vehicle to the RMV. Such a fee will increase the revenue of RMV by 10 times.
5. The government can implement a student loan scheme for higher education by the state universities. The loan is to be paid monthly for 10 years after completion of the degree without interest. This will recover a substantial portion of the costs the state incurs on universities. Subsequently, the student loan scheme could be extended to include private universities. To estimate the recovery, if one assumes 50,000 students enter state universities a year, and the fee for higher education degrees is Rs. 10,000 a month, then the income for a year will be in the range of Rs. 24 billion. There are several advantages of this method. One is that the students will attempt to complete their degree on time rather than staying in the university without completing the degree. This is as every month his/her cost will increase by Rs. 10,000. The other is as the university gets paid Rs. 10,000 a month for every student they admit they will try to increase the capacities and the intake to increase their revenue.
6. Even for healthcare, a fee of Rs. 100 for a consultation and, say, Rs. 500 a day for hospitalisation and Rs. 5000 for surgery is not unfair for members of a family that have an income over Rs. 100,000 a month or Rs. 25 million in assets.
7. Although not an example of a possible user-pay service, the cost of a poverty alleviation scheme (Samurdhi) could also be modified to be less costly to the government and more effective for recipients. The poverty alleviation systems have failed to pull a significant portion of the poor out of their situation. If the government coordinates a scheme where people and companies volunteer to look after a needy family by providing Rs. 10,000 a month, it will be way better than Rs. 3,000 or so the Samurdhi pays.
The most significant advantage is that the sponsor could provide children with used or new clothes, books, and education and career guidance. Some would help their recipient families with assistance to home renovation, household goods, food, etc. While many well-to-do individuals and families will volunteer to sponsor another (poor) family, large state-sector and private-sector banks and other organisations will volunteer to support hundreds of families. The most crucial part of such a scheme is the guidance and further help the low-income families would get so that many families would come out of poverty after a few years.
There could be many government services that are now provided free of charge or for a small fee. Subsidising for low-income earning families is always justified in any society. However, providing free or subsidised services to those who can afford to pay and making the private sector employees pay higher taxes on their income is grossly unfair.
The government should introduce a free services card for families with income of less than Rs. 100,000 a month or Rs. 25 million in assets so they can be provided with free education and healthcare. This should be done based on an affidavit signed by the head of the household. If an applicant gives a false affidavit on their income and assets, they could be prosecuted, and a fine of several folds of the cost of free services provided could be recovered. Similar systems are implemented in developed countries with reasonable success.
(The writer is a business professional working in a leading firm).
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