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Dhaka extrapolates FY22 tax buoyancy at 12.2%

Dhaka, Wednesday


27 November 2024


Business Insider Bangladesh

Dhaka extrapolates FY22 tax buoyancy at 12.2%

BI Report || BusinessInsider

Published: 16:43, 5 December 2020  
Dhaka extrapolates FY22 tax buoyancy at 12.2%

Photo: Collected

Dhaka (Dec 5, 2020): The government has projected a marginal improvement in the tax to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio in the 2022-23 fiscal, despite the Covid-19 taking a toll on the country's revenue collections this financial year.

The tax-to-GDP ratio is a ratio of a nation's tax revenue relative to its gross domestic product, the value of goods and services produced in a country during a certain period.

The ratio is also a marker of how well the government controls a country's economic resources, reports UNB.

According to an official document, the tax to GDP ratio in the current fiscal has been estimated at 11.9 percent while it was 12.4 percent in the 2019-20 fiscal.

Despite Covid hitting the revenue generating sectors hard, the government estimates it to rise to 12.2 percent in 2022-23.

The document, in possession with UNB, states that of the 12.2 percent of the projected revenue-GDP ratio in the next fiscal, 10.6 percent would come from the National Board of Revenue (NBR), 0.6 percent from non-NBR sources and the remaining 1.1 percent from non-tax sources.

Similarly, in the current fiscal, the government has projected to get 10.4 percent from the National Board of Revenue (NBR), 0.5 percent from non-NBR sources and 1 percent from non-tax sources.

In the 2019-20 fiscal, the government had originally projected to boost the tax to GDP ratio to 13.1 percent -- 11.3 percent from NBR, 0.5 percent from non-NBR sources and 1.3 percent from non-tax sources. However, the target was subsequently lowered to 12.4 percent in the wake of Covid.

Due to the implementation of the new Value Added Tax (VAT) law, the revenue collection has declined, as per the document. Currently, the tax to GDP ratio of the country is much lower than the neighbouring and other developing countries.

According to data from the October 2019 issue of the World Economic Outlook, the tax to GDP ratio of the country has been 9.9 percent on an average since 2015-2019, while it is 19.8 percent for India, 23.9 percent for Nepal, 14.7 percent for Pakistan, 13.5 percent for Sri Lanka.

The ratio is 25.6 percent for developing countries and 35.9 percent for developed countries, according to the data.

The document says that the government has taken various reform initiatives to improve the overall revenue collection.

Automated systems have been introduced for VAT, and other tax collections, along with bonded warehouses. The new Customs Act is also on the anvil.

Apart from the reforms programmes, modernisation of the tax administration, expansion of tax net, development in tax compliance and law amendment, and simplification would create significant positive impact on revenue collections in the future, as per the document.