Though, the trade deficit has decreased – as it has wished – it failed to meet the revenue mobilisation putting the Finance Ministry under pressure to manage resources.
The Department of Customs data reveals that the trade deficit – in the first five months of the current fiscal year – has widened by only 6.3 per cent to Rs 533.64 billion as the export jumped by around 27 per cent to Rs 47.61 billion, whereas imports fell by 4 per cent to Rs 581.25 billion. “Processed soybean oil and palm oil have knocked juice, jam and footwear off the list of largest exports to India, pushing the exports up,” the department data reveals. However, Nepal does not produce any soybean or palm oil, and traders import crude oils from Brazil, Argentina, Ukraine, Indonesia, Australia and other countries which they process and export to India without paying a penny in tariffs.
Under the South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA) agreement, zero tariffs are levied on goods exported from underdeveloped countries like Nepal, and Nepali traders have been importing crude palm oil from third countries by paying minimum customs duty, and then exporting the finished product to India free of customs duty.
The government, but, failed to meet revenue mobilisation target also due to low imports as the revenue from imported goods shrank by Rs 6 billion between mid-July and mid-December. The department's data reveals that the government collected import taxes worth Rs 150.81 billion, down by Rs 5.52 billion from Rs 156.33 billion collected during the same period last year.
The government has set a target of collecting 45 per cent of the total targeted tax revenue through tariff on imported goods. In the first five months, customs offices collected only 34 per cent of the annual target to collect Rs 447.59 billion from import tariffs. “Out of the total import taxes, the government has targeted to collect Rs 196.62 billion in value added tax (VAT), Rs 187.30 billion in customs and Rs 63.67 billion in excise imposed on the imported goods. But according to Financial Comptroller General Office (FCGO) data, the overall tax mobilisation – as of December – stood at a mere 31.24 per cent of the targeted tax revenue of more than Rs 1 trillion.
In the last fiscal year 2018-19, the government had set revenue collection target at Rs 945 billion, which was later revised to Rs 860 billion. However, the government even missed the revised target by almost Rs 25 billion, according to the FCGO data.
And this fiscal year too, finance minister will fail to meet revenue mobilisation target also due to his own policy to discourage imports of luxury items and automobiles.
The Department of Customs data reveals that the trade deficit – in the first five months of the current fiscal year – has widened by only 6.3 per cent to Rs 533.64 billion as the export jumped by around 27 per cent to Rs 47.61 billion, whereas imports fell by 4 per cent to Rs 581.25 billion. “Processed soybean oil and palm oil have knocked juice, jam and footwear off the list of largest exports to India, pushing the exports up,” the department data reveals. However, Nepal does not produce any soybean or palm oil, and traders import crude oils from Brazil, Argentina, Ukraine, Indonesia, Australia and other countries which they process and export to India without paying a penny in tariffs.
Under the South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA) agreement, zero tariffs are levied on goods exported from underdeveloped countries like Nepal, and Nepali traders have been importing crude palm oil from third countries by paying minimum customs duty, and then exporting the finished product to India free of customs duty.
The government, but, failed to meet revenue mobilisation target also due to low imports as the revenue from imported goods shrank by Rs 6 billion between mid-July and mid-December. The department's data reveals that the government collected import taxes worth Rs 150.81 billion, down by Rs 5.52 billion from Rs 156.33 billion collected during the same period last year.
The government has set a target of collecting 45 per cent of the total targeted tax revenue through tariff on imported goods. In the first five months, customs offices collected only 34 per cent of the annual target to collect Rs 447.59 billion from import tariffs. “Out of the total import taxes, the government has targeted to collect Rs 196.62 billion in value added tax (VAT), Rs 187.30 billion in customs and Rs 63.67 billion in excise imposed on the imported goods. But according to Financial Comptroller General Office (FCGO) data, the overall tax mobilisation – as of December – stood at a mere 31.24 per cent of the targeted tax revenue of more than Rs 1 trillion.
In the last fiscal year 2018-19, the government had set revenue collection target at Rs 945 billion, which was later revised to Rs 860 billion. However, the government even missed the revised target by almost Rs 25 billion, according to the FCGO data.
And this fiscal year too, finance minister will fail to meet revenue mobilisation target also due to his own policy to discourage imports of luxury items and automobiles.
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