Tuesday Feb 03, 2026
Tuesday, 3 February 2026 02:47 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

For decades, Sri Lanka has wooed foreign investors with a familiar playbook: “Come to us, and we won’t tax your profits for multiple years.” This strategy of tax holidays and slashed corporate rates was once a powerful magnet for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).
However, the global rules of the game have changed overnight. With the implementation of Pillar Two of the OECD’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) framework, the old tools are not just blunt—they are broken.
As major economies adopt a Global Minimum Tax of 15%, Sri Lanka faces a critical reality: continuing to offer profit-based tax holidays/concessionary tax income tax rates to large Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) is no longer an incentive for the investor. It is simply a donation of Sri Lankan tax revenue to foreign treasuries.
The “Donation” problem
The new OECD rules apply to “in-scope” MNEs—giants with consolidated annual revenues exceeding €750 million. Under Pillar Two, if these companies pay less than 15% effective tax in a country like Sri Lanka, their home country (or another jurisdiction where they operate) has the right to collect the difference as a “Top-Up Tax.”
Consider a large European tech manufacturer setting up in Sri Lanka. Under our current Strategic Development Project (SDP) rules, we might grant them a 0% tax rate to attract their factory.
The investor pays 15% regardless. The only difference is who gets the money. By offering a tax holiday, Sri Lanka is voluntarily surrendering revenue that the investor is legally obligated to pay somewhere. We are effectively subsidising the treasuries of foreign nations, who have adopted OECD Pillar two rules, with money generated on our soil.
The solution: A “Two-Basket” approach
Sri Lanka must stop trying to fit all investors into one policy. We need a targeted Two-Basket Strategy.
Basket 1: The small investors (Status Quo)
For investors with revenues below the €750 million threshold, the OECD Pillar Two rules do not apply. Traditional tools like tax holidays and reduced corporate income tax rates remain highly effective for them.
As major economies adopt a Global Minimum Tax of 15%, Sri Lanka faces a critical reality: continuing to offer profit-based tax holidays/concessionary tax income tax rates to large Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) is no longer an incentive for the investor. It is simply a donation of Sri Lankan tax revenue to foreign treasuries
Basket 2: The large MNEs (The Pivot)
For the “in-scope” giants, profit-based incentives are dead. We must shift to Cost-Based Incentives.
Unlike tax holidays, cost-based incentives like ECAs are generally viewed more favorably under the new global rules because they reward actual economic activity rather than paper profit shifting.
The secret weapons: SBIE and QRTC
To truly compete with regional rivals like Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia, Sri Lanka must adopt the specific technical mechanisms designed to work within the OECD framework.
1. Substance-Based Income Exclusion (SBIE)
The OECD rules are not entirely merciless; they offer a “carve-out” for real economic substance. The SBIE rule allows a jurisdiction to exclude a specific percentage of the income generated from tangible assets (factories, equipment) and payroll costs from the Top-Up Tax calculation.
Sri Lanka has the opportunity to modernise its fiscal toolkit, ensuring that we attract high-quality, high-substance investment while keeping our tax revenue within our borders
2. Qualified Refundable Tax Credits (QRTC)
This is the gold standard for modern incentives. A QRTC is a tax credit that is refundable in cash (or cash equivalent) within four years if the investor does not have enough tax liability to use it.
Lessons from the region
We are not operating in a vacuum. Our competitors are already moving:
If Sri Lanka continues to offer obsolete tax holidays/concessionary income tax rates to large ‘in-scope’ MNEs, we will be the only shop on the street selling VHS tapes in a streaming era.
The way forward: Immediate policy action
Policymakers must realise that adopting these techniques does not require us to wait for full implementation of a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT). While a QDMTT is necessary eventually to ensure we capture the tax revenue here, we can—and must—restructure our incentives now.
The action plan:
1. Segregate Incentives: Create clear legislative distinction between incentives for “In-Scope MNEs” (Basket 2) and “Other Investors” (Basket 1).
2. Legislate QRTCs: Introduce Qualified Refundable Tax Credits for high-value sectors (R&D, Green Energy, Tech) specifically for large in-scope MNEs.
3. Leverage SBIE: Design incentives that scale based on the volume of tangible assets and the size of the payroll in Sri Lanka, directly tapping into the Substance-Based Income Exclusion.
The era of the “blanket tax holidays and concessionary income tax rates” to attract large MNEs is over. Sri Lanka has the opportunity to modernise its fiscal toolkit, ensuring that we attract high-quality, high-substance investment while keeping our tax revenue within our borders. Let’s stop donating to foreign governments and start investing in our own future.
(The author is an Attorney at Law, LLB, FCMA (UK) and a CGMA)