- 2021-09-11 06:04:52
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-21 08:13:21
Economy faces challeges of revenue shortfall and defaulting bank loans: Document
Photo Collected:
Business Desk: Dhaka,
Sept-11,
Revenue deficit
defaulting bank loans and worsening poverty situation due to COVID-19 are
causing some problems in the country’s economy.
According to a
budgetary document, revenue deficit and increasing unrealised loans in banking
sector are hurtimg the economy.
It also stated that
poverty situation is also a matter of future concern
The target of revenue
collection for the running fiscal has been set at Tk 330,078 crore.
VAT wing will
contribute the lion share with Tk 127,745 crore and target for Income Tax and
Tax on Profit has been set at Tk 104, 952 crore.
The revenue collection
from import duty will be Tk 37, 907 crore, Tk 54,465 crore from from
Supplementary Duty, Tk 56 crore from export duty, Tk 3825 crore from Excise
Duty while Tk 1050 crore from other taxes and duties.
In the last fiscal
(2020-21) the revised revenue target was Tk 301,000 crore while it was set Tk
330,000 in the main budget.
But the NBR could not
attain the revised target mainly due to the ongoing pandemic that forced the
government to impose various types of lockdown that hampered the economy a lot.
According to the
available data the revenue collection in 2020-21 fiscal was Tk 41,000 crore
less than the revised target while Tk 70,000 from the original target.
The collection was Tk
259,900 crore although the growth was 19 percent.
According to data, 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% for
developing countries and 35.9% for developed countries, according to the data.
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.
The document mentioned
that due to increasing revenue deficit it is becoming tougher day by day for
very necessary public expenditure financing in various sectors like
infrastructure, health, education, water resources and social safety net.
It also said that in
the banking sector especially in the public banks high rate of unrealised loans
is creating pressure on eonomical situation of damaged banks and causing
hurdles to collect deposit.
On January 25, 2021
Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal in Parliament said that there are more that
300,000 loan defaulters in various banks and financial institutions across
Bangladesh.
As of October 2020,
there were 334,982 loan defaulters across the country.
However, the amount of
non-performing loans (NPLs) has gone down by Tk 17,737 crore.
As of September 2020,
the amount outstanding loans stand at Tk 94,440.47 crore, per Bangladesh Bank
data, the minister mentioned.
Due to the prevalence
of the COVID-19 pandemic, the official document said, deferral facility has
been provided for loan classification for a period of one year from January 1,
2020 to December 31, 2020.
To facilitate the
repayment of outstanding loan installments, from January 2021, the borrowers
have been given an opportunity to increase the term of the existing
unclassified term loan account by a maximum of 50 per cent.
As a result of these
initiatives, classified loans have declined compared to that of the previous
year.
The budgetary document
also said that Bangladesh has achieved significant progress in reducing poverty
to 20.5 percent by 2019.
“COVID-19 pandemic made
slight obstacle in attaining this achievement,” it said.
End/Dct/Nit/Sma/