தலைப்புகள்
ஆராயுங்கள்
Featured Insight
2025 Vote on Account’s revenue gains may fall short of primary spending increase
On 6 December, Parliament approved the 2025 Vote on Account, allocating funds for the first four months of the year. To understand what a Vote on Account entails, read our blog here. For January to April 2025, primary expenditure—which includes both recurring and capital spending but excludes interest payments—is budgeted at LKR 1,425 billion. This breaks down into LKR 425 billion for capital projects and LKR 1,000 billion for recurrent expenses. The government expects revenue of LKR 1,600 billion, resulting in a primary balance (revenue minus primary expenditure) of LKR 175 billion. Compared to 2024, both expenditure and revenue have increased significantly. Primary expenditure for 2025 is projected to be LKR 454 billion (47%) higher than the LKR 971 billion spent during an average four-month* period in 2024. However, revenue is expected to grow by only LKR 400 billion (33%). This indicates that the primary balance expected for 2025 could be lower than what is achieved in 2024, extrapolating from the first four months of revenue and expenditure budgeted in the vote on account.
Featured Insight
2025 Vote on Account’s revenue gains may fall short of primary spending increase
On 6 December, Parliament approved the 2025 Vote on Account, allocating funds for the first four months of the year. To understand what a Vote on Account entails, read our blog here. For January to April 2025, primary expenditure—which includes both recurring and capital spending but excludes interest payments—is budgeted at LKR 1,425 billion. This breaks down into LKR 425 billion for capital projects and LKR 1,000 billion for recurrent expenses. The government expects revenue of LKR 1,600 billion, resulting in a primary balance (revenue minus primary expenditure) of LKR 175 billion. Compared to 2024, both expenditure and revenue have increased significantly. Primary expenditure for 2025 is projected to be LKR 454 billion (47%) higher than the LKR 971 billion spent during an average four-month* period in 2024. However, revenue is expected to grow by only LKR 400 billion (33%). This indicates that the primary balance expected for 2025 could be lower than what is achieved in 2024, extrapolating from the first four months of revenue and expenditure budgeted in the vote on account.
Featured Insight
2025 Vote on Account’s revenue gains may fall short of primary spending increase
On 6 December, Parliament approved the 2025 Vote on Account, allocating funds for the first four months of the year. To understand what a Vote on Account entails, read our blog here. For January to April 2025, primary expenditure—which includes both recurring and capital spending but excludes interest payments—is budgeted at LKR 1,425 billion. This breaks down into LKR 425 billion for capital projects and LKR 1,000 billion for recurrent expenses. The government expects revenue of LKR 1,600 billion, resulting in a primary balance (revenue minus primary expenditure) of LKR 175 billion. Compared to 2024, both expenditure and revenue have increased significantly. Primary expenditure for 2025 is projected to be LKR 454 billion (47%) higher than the LKR 971 billion spent during an average four-month* period in 2024. However, revenue is expected to grow by only LKR 400 billion (33%). This indicates that the primary balance expected for 2025 could be lower than what is achieved in 2024, extrapolating from the first four months of revenue and expenditure budgeted in the vote on account.
Featured Insight
2025 Vote on Account’s revenue gains may fall short of primary spending increase
On 6 December, Parliament approved the 2025 Vote on Account, allocating funds for the first four months of the year. To understand what a Vote on Account entails, read our blog here. For January to April 2025, primary expenditure—which includes both recurring and capital spending but excludes interest payments—is budgeted at LKR 1,425 billion. This breaks down into LKR 425 billion for capital projects and LKR 1,000 billion for recurrent expenses. The government expects revenue of LKR 1,600 billion, resulting in a primary balance (revenue minus primary expenditure) of LKR 175 billion. Compared to 2024, both expenditure and revenue have increased significantly. Primary expenditure for 2025 is projected to be LKR 454 billion (47%) higher than the LKR 971 billion spent during an average four-month* period in 2024. However, revenue is expected to grow by only LKR 400 billion (33%). This indicates that the primary balance expected for 2025 could be lower than what is achieved in 2024, extrapolating from the first four months of revenue and expenditure budgeted in the vote on account.
தரவுத்தொகுப்புகள்
அறிக்கைகள்
சட்டங்கள் மற்றும் வர்த்தமானிகள்
விரிவான பார்வை
டாஷ்போர்ட
Annual Budget Dashboard
வரவு செலவுத்திட்ட வாக்குறுதிகள்
Fiscal Indicators
எரிபொருள் விலை கண்காணிப்பான்
IMF கண்காணிப்பான்
உட்கட்டமைப்பு கருத்திட்ட கண்காணிப்பான்
PF வயர்
எங்களை பற்றி
TA
English
සිංහල
தமிழ்
;
Thank You
ஜெனரல்
-
முகப்பு
தலைப்புகள்
விவசாயம் மற்றும் நீர்ப்பாசனம்
விவசாயம் மற்றும் நீர்ப்பாசனம்
விவசாயம் மற்றும் நீர்ப்பாசனத்திற்கான அரசாங்க செலவினங்களின் சமீபத்திய போக்குகள் மற்றும் முன்னேற்றங்கள்.
பி.எஃப். வயரில் இணைப்பிலிருந்து
Source:
Economy Next
China’s US$74 rice grant to reach Sri Lanka by end...
China’s embassy in Sri Lanka said the first two shipments of a 500 million yuan (74 million US dollar) grant of rice will reach the island’s shores on June 25 and June 30.
மேலும் வாசிக்க
Source:
Daily Mirror
Cabinet nods for fertilizer imports
The cabinet on Monday has unanimously decided to import total requirement of chemical fertiliser for the coming Yala and Maha seasons. Accordingly, Sri Lanka will import 15,000 MTS of Urea, 45,000 MTS of Murate of Potash (MOP) and 36,000 MT...
மேலும் வாசிக்க
Source:
DailyFT
World Bank, EU support Sri Lanka’s agriculture mod...
The Ministry of Finance and the World Bank recently signed a new grant from the European Union to support the Agriculture Sector Modernisation Project ( ASMP). This grant is part of the EU’s EUR 25 million support to the $ 125 million project and will be administe...
மேலும் வாசிக்க
நுண்ணறிவு விவசாயம் மற்றும் நீர்ப்பாசனம்
இரசாயன உரங்களில் தங்கியிருக்கும் இலங்கைய...
இலங்கையை இயற்கை...
விவசாயம் மற்றும் நீர்ப்பாசனத் துறைக்கான...
Has the Government Fulfilled its Policy...
The National Policy Framework: Vistas...
Have Governments Fulfilled their Agricul...
Have consecut...
விவரணம்
மே மாதத்திற்குள் சர்வதேச நாணய நிதியத்தின் (IMF) 29...
சர்வதேச நாணய நிதிய (IMF) திட்டத்தின் கீழ் கண்காணிக்கக்கூடிய 100 உறுதிமொழிகளில் 29 ஐ இலங்கை பூர்த்தி செய்துள்ளதுடன், 2023 மே மாத இறுதிக்குள் அவற்றின் மூன்று உறுதிமொழிகளை நிறைவேற்ற தவறியுள்ளதாக வெரிட்டே ரிசர்ச்சின் 'IMF கண்காணிப்பான்...
மேலும் வாசிக்க
Will the budget's veil of secrecy be lifted in 202...
The lack of transparency on the implementation progress of proposals in budget speeches has increased sharply in 2022 and 2023, according to a systematic evaluation conducted by Verité Research. The governme...
மேலும் வாசிக்க
இலங்கை அரசாங்கத்தின் கல்விக்கான செலவினம் தெற்காசிய...
2022 ஆம் ஆண்டில் இலங்கையின் மத்திய மற்றும் மாகாண அரசாங்கங்கள் அதன் மொத்த உள்நாட்டு உற்பத்தியில் வெறும் 1.5 சதவீதத்தை மட்டுமே முதன்மை, இடைநிலை மற்றும் மூன்றாம் நிலைக் கல்விக்காக ஒதுக்கியுள்ளன. இது தெற்காசியாவில் கல்விச் செலவுக்கான பட்டியலில் இலங்கையை கடைசி இடத்தில் தள்ளி...
மேலும் வாசிக்க