Sri Lanka’s exporters cannot bear the burden of the removal of the Simplified Value Added Tax (SVAT) in October, the National Chamber of Exporters (NCE) said in a public statement released yesterday (8).
“The export community is not asking for indefinite protection,” NCE President Indhra Kaushal Rajapaksa said.
“But we are pleading with the government- do not dismantle SVAT this year. Exporters are already under pressure from rising energy and logistics costs, global trade uncertainty, and domestic inflation. Now is not the time to weaken a sector that brings in vital foreign exchange.”
Originally introduced in 2005 and streamlined in 2011, SVAT was designed to circumvent the many inefficiencies of the traditional refund-based VAT system. It eliminated upfront VAT payments, enabling exporters to maintain working capital and avoid delays and bureaucratic hurdles in claiming refunds.
With the government announcing that SVAT will be abolished by the end of October, exporters are urging authorities to delay any action on SVAT removal this year, a year already fraught with economic headwinds and external volatility.
The clear message from the seminar: Exporters need breathing space, not added complexity.
The statement added: “Exporters remember the pre-SVAT era all too well: refund delays stretching for months, cumbersome paperwork, and debilitating cash flow gaps. Many businesses were forced to borrow at high interest rates just to survive. The NCE warns that a return to such conditions - without a fully functional, integrated, and tested VAT refund system - would be a severe policy misstep.”
NCE Secretary General and CEO Shiham Marikar said: “We are not against reform. But reform must be smart, gradual, and data-driven. To date, there has been no transparent evidence presented to justify the claim that SVAT is being widely misused. Even the Inland Revenue Department has admitted that SVAT’s removal will not significantly improve tax revenue… So why the haste?”
While the removal of SVAT is said to align with IMF recommendations and broader fiscal reforms, the NCE cautions that global templates must be adapted to local conditions. In developed economies, VAT refunds are processed within 30 days through fully digitised systems.
In Sri Lanka, however, exporters continue to experience refund delays of 3-6 months or longer.
“We support digitisation. We support efficiency. But we cannot support premature changes that jeopardise businesses and livelihoods,” Rajapaksa stressed. “Until the systems at the IRD, Customs, and Ports Authority are seamlessly integrated, tested, and shown to work under real-time conditions, the SVAT mechanism must remain.”
“Give us time. Give us the space to breathe and grow. Don’t punish exporters for system inefficiencies beyond their control,” Rajapaksa concluded. “Let us focus on meeting our export targets and building back stronger. Help us help the economy.”