Tax reforms in Sri Lanka: will a tax on public servants improve progressivity?
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Date
2012-12
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Partnership for Economic Policy
Abstract
The  Sri  Lankan  government  implemented  tax  reforms  in  2011,  including  removal  of  the  tax exemption given to public servants and reduction of personal income tax rates in order to improve tax compliance from pay-as-you-earn (PAYE) tax payers. This study evaluates the 2007 and 2011 tax systems in order to examine the effects that taxing the income of public sector employees has on total tax revenues and the tax base. The study also compares the distributional effects of the different tax systems. Study further  conducts simulation analyses to assess the most progressive means of achieving the 2007 tax revenue levels. Implications for tax evasion are also examined under different tax systems. The study finds that the 2011 tax reforms reduce tax revenue by 48 percent relative to the structure of income taxation in 2007. This decline in tax revenues occurs even though income taxes are extended to public sector workers because the 2011 tax reforms reduced  the  rate  of  income  taxes  across  the  board  and  increased  the  ta x-free  threshold.  Our simulations  show  that  tax  revenues  would  have  risen  if  the  reforms  were  limited  to  introducing income  taxes  to  public  servants. The  resulting  hypothetical)  tax  system  would also have been more progressive than the tax structure resulting from the 2011 reforms. The study evaluated the distributional impacts of modifications to the 2011 tax system which would increase tax revenue to their  level  in  2007.  More  specifically,  the  present  study  finds  that  the  most  progressive  way  to attain this tax revenue target would be to increase tax rates on taxable income by 6 percentage points and to lower the tax-free threshold from LKR 600,000 to LKR 400,000.
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Keywords
Comparing tax systems, Distributional effects of taxes, Income redistribution, tax redistribution, tax progressivity approach, income progressivity approach, tax revenue, progressivity indices, inequality effects of taxes