මාතෘකා
ගවේෂණය කරන්න
විදසුන්
Interest Costs Have Been Eating Up Revenue
In 2023, for the first time in history, the government spent 9% of its GDP on interest payments, which took up 80% of the government revenue. A high interest-to-revenue ratio can be severely detrimental to a country's debt sustainability. This high ratio creates a need to borrow more, undermining debt sustainability and leaving limited revenue for essential government spending and investments. The interest-to-revenue ratio has increased in recent years for two reasons. Revenue Fell Due to Tax Reductions in 2019 Government revenue as a share of GDP dropped from 12% in 2019 to 9% in 2020. This is mainly due to the newly elected government lowering several tax rates in 2019. Thus, the interest share of revenue increased to 71% in 2020 from 47% in 2019, even though the interest payments as a share of GDP remained at 6%. Interest Costs Surged Due to High Interest Rates and More Government Debt Interest expenditure as a share of GDP increased to 9% in 2023 from 6% in pre-2021. This is due to (1) the domestic interest rates skyrocketing to above 25% post-2021 from less than 10% in the prior years - mainly owing to tight monetary conditions and lack of access to foreign financing. (2) Central government debt also increased significantly from 81.9% in 2019 to 114.2% in 2022, leading to higher interest expenditure as the government had to pay more interest on the excessive debt obtained. It is also important to note that this interest figure would have been much higher if the accrued interest expenditure on defaulted foreign debt had been included.
විදසුන්
Interest Costs Have Been Eating Up Revenue
In 2023, for the first time in history, the government spent 9% of its GDP on interest payments, which took up 80% of the government revenue. A high interest-to-revenue ratio can be severely detrimental to a country's debt sustainability. This high ratio creates a need to borrow more, undermining debt sustainability and leaving limited revenue for essential government spending and investments. The interest-to-revenue ratio has increased in recent years for two reasons. Revenue Fell Due to Tax Reductions in 2019 Government revenue as a share of GDP dropped from 12% in 2019 to 9% in 2020. This is mainly due to the newly elected government lowering several tax rates in 2019. Thus, the interest share of revenue increased to 71% in 2020 from 47% in 2019, even though the interest payments as a share of GDP remained at 6%. Interest Costs Surged Due to High Interest Rates and More Government Debt Interest expenditure as a share of GDP increased to 9% in 2023 from 6% in pre-2021. This is due to (1) the domestic interest rates skyrocketing to above 25% post-2021 from less than 10% in the prior years - mainly owing to tight monetary conditions and lack of access to foreign financing. (2) Central government debt also increased significantly from 81.9% in 2019 to 114.2% in 2022, leading to higher interest expenditure as the government had to pay more interest on the excessive debt obtained. It is also important to note that this interest figure would have been much higher if the accrued interest expenditure on defaulted foreign debt had been included.
විදසුන්
Interest Costs Have Been Eating Up Revenue
In 2023, for the first time in history, the government spent 9% of its GDP on interest payments, which took up 80% of the government revenue. A high interest-to-revenue ratio can be severely detrimental to a country's debt sustainability. This high ratio creates a need to borrow more, undermining debt sustainability and leaving limited revenue for essential government spending and investments. The interest-to-revenue ratio has increased in recent years for two reasons. Revenue Fell Due to Tax Reductions in 2019 Government revenue as a share of GDP dropped from 12% in 2019 to 9% in 2020. This is mainly due to the newly elected government lowering several tax rates in 2019. Thus, the interest share of revenue increased to 71% in 2020 from 47% in 2019, even though the interest payments as a share of GDP remained at 6%. Interest Costs Surged Due to High Interest Rates and More Government Debt Interest expenditure as a share of GDP increased to 9% in 2023 from 6% in pre-2021. This is due to (1) the domestic interest rates skyrocketing to above 25% post-2021 from less than 10% in the prior years - mainly owing to tight monetary conditions and lack of access to foreign financing. (2) Central government debt also increased significantly from 81.9% in 2019 to 114.2% in 2022, leading to higher interest expenditure as the government had to pay more interest on the excessive debt obtained. It is also important to note that this interest figure would have been much higher if the accrued interest expenditure on defaulted foreign debt had been included.
විදසුන්
Interest Costs Have Been Eating Up Revenue
In 2023, for the first time in history, the government spent 9% of its GDP on interest payments, which took up 80% of the government revenue. A high interest-to-revenue ratio can be severely detrimental to a country's debt sustainability. This high ratio creates a need to borrow more, undermining debt sustainability and leaving limited revenue for essential government spending and investments. The interest-to-revenue ratio has increased in recent years for two reasons. Revenue Fell Due to Tax Reductions in 2019 Government revenue as a share of GDP dropped from 12% in 2019 to 9% in 2020. This is mainly due to the newly elected government lowering several tax rates in 2019. Thus, the interest share of revenue increased to 71% in 2020 from 47% in 2019, even though the interest payments as a share of GDP remained at 6%. Interest Costs Surged Due to High Interest Rates and More Government Debt Interest expenditure as a share of GDP increased to 9% in 2023 from 6% in pre-2021. This is due to (1) the domestic interest rates skyrocketing to above 25% post-2021 from less than 10% in the prior years - mainly owing to tight monetary conditions and lack of access to foreign financing. (2) Central government debt also increased significantly from 81.9% in 2019 to 114.2% in 2022, leading to higher interest expenditure as the government had to pay more interest on the excessive debt obtained. It is also important to note that this interest figure would have been much higher if the accrued interest expenditure on defaulted foreign debt had been included.
දත්ත
වාර්තා
පනත් සහ ගැසට් පත්ර
විදසුන්
ඩෑෂ්බෝඩ්
Annual Budget Dashboard
අයවැය පොරොන්දු
Fiscal Indicators
ඉන්ධන මිල නිරීක්ෂණ ට්රැකරය
IMF මීටරය
යටිතල පහසුකම් විපරම
PF වයර්
අපි ගැන
SIN
English
සිංහල
தமிழ்
;
Thank You
රාජ්ය මූල්ය දත්ත හා විශ්ලේෂණයන් සඳහා
නිදහස් හා විවෘත ප්රවේශය
නිවස
විදසුන්
සියළුම
කෘෂිකර්ම හා වාරිමාර්ග
Articles
2021 අයවැය
2022 අයවැය
2023 අයවැය
2024 අයවැය
සිවිල් පරිපාලනය
ණය
ආරක්ෂාව හා මහජන සාමය
අධ්යාපනය
සේවක අර්ථසාධක අරමුදල
බලශක්තිය සහ ජල සැපයුම
පරිසරය
වියදම
මූල්යකරණය
සෞඛ්යය
International Monetary Fund
ආදායම
සමාජ ආරක්ෂණය සහ සුභසාධනය
ප්රවාහනය සහ සන්නිවේදනය
නාගරික සංවර්ධනය සහ නිවාස
ටැග්
ආදායම
සියළුම
ක්රියාකාරී සැළසුම
සැබෑ
වාර්ෂික වාර්තාව
විසර්ජන පනත
වත්කම් කළමනාකරනය
විගණන
බැංකුව
බැඳුම්කර
අයවැය
ශ්රී ලංකා මහ බැංකුව
වන්දි
රාජ්ය මූල්ය පිළිබඳ කමිටුව
ආයතනික
කොවිඩ්
රේගු බද්ද
රේගුව
ණය කළමනාකරණය
ණය
හිඟ මූල්යකරණය
සංවර්ධනය
ආපදාව
මැතිවරණ
සේවක අර්ථසාධක අරමුදල
රැකියා නියුක්තිය
සේවක අර්ථසාධක අරමුදල
ආර්ථික සේවා ගාස්තු
ඇස්තමේන්තු
සුරාබදු
වියදම
විදේශ ණය
මුදල් පනත
මූල්යකරණය
රාජ්ය මූල්ය ප්රතිපත්තිය
සූදු බද්ද
ගැසට්
ප්රදාන
සෞඛ්යය
ජාත්යන්තර මූල්ය අරමුදල
ආදායම් බදු
ණය
සාර්ව ආර්ථික විද්යාව
මුදල් අමාත්යංශය
මෝටර් වාහන
ජාතික ඇගයීම් ප්රතිපත්තිය
ජාතිය ගොඩනැගීමේ බද්ද
වරාය හා ගුවන් තොටුපල සංවර්ධන බද්ද
පාර්ලිමේන්තුව
කාර්ය සාධන වාර්තාව
ප්රසම්පාදනය
ප්රගති වාර්තාව
ව්යාපෘති ප්රගතිය
පළාත් සභා අයවැය
රාජ්ය මූල්ය
වේතනය
සංචිත
ආදායම
වංචා
විශේෂ වෙළඳ බද්ද
රාජ්ය සංස්ථා
මුද්දර ගාස්තු
රාජ්ය සංස්ථා
බදු නිදහස් කිරීම්
බදු සහන දීමනා
බදු ප්රතිසංස්කරණ
බදු ආදායම
බද්ද
විදුලි සංදේශ බද්ද
දුම්කොළ
එකතු කළ අගය මත බද්ද
දත්ත
වාර්තා
පනත් සහ ගැසට් පත්ර
විදසුන්
වර්ෂය අනුව තෝරන්න
සිට
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
දක්වා
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
State of The Budget Report 2022: Assessment on whether the expenditure allocations and taxation policies are in line with the government’s policy
This is the second report in a series of two reports on Sri Lanka’s central government budget for the year 2022. The report assesses whether the expenditure allocations and taxation policies are in line with the government’s policy.
2022-11-28
විශ්ලේෂණය බලන්න
රජයේ ආදායමේ අපගමනය: 2021 ජනවාරි සිට අගෝස්තු දක්වා
මෙම තොරතුරු ප්රස්තාරය ඇස්තමේන්තුගත ආදායමෙන් ආදායමේ අපගමනය පෙන්වයි සටහන :...
2021-11-23
විශ්ලේෂණය බලන්න
රාජ්ය ආදායමේ විස්තරය, 2010– 2022
ආදායම් බදු, සුරාබදු, VAT, PAL, NBT, විශේෂ වෙළඳ භාණ්ඩ බද්ද, වෙනත් බදු, බදු නොවන ආදායම් සහ ප්රදාන ලෙස කොටස් කර ඇති රජයේ ආදායම පහත තොරතුරු ප්රස්තාරයෙන් දැක්වේ.
2021-11-23
විශ්ලේෂණය බලන්න
2022 අයවැය සාරාංශය: රාජ්ය ආදායම, වියදම සහ හිඟය
2022 වර්ෂය සඳහා රජයේ වියදම්, ආදායම සහ අයවැය හිඟය පිළිබඳ සාරාංශයක් පෙන්වන විස්තර ප්රස්තාරයක් මෙහි දක්වා ඇත. මෙම සංඛ්යා සම්බන්ධව විස්තරාත්මක තොරතුරු බැ...
2021-11-16
විශ්ලේෂණය බලන්න