Kuwait Times

Sri Lanka battles labor shortage amid massive constructi­on boom

Contractor­s at home desperate for workers

-

COLOMBO: Cheap Sri Lankan labor has built skyscraper­s and condos across the Gulf for decades but now contractor­s at home are desperate for workers as the island nation experience­s an unpreceden­ted constructi­on boom. The labor shortage has seen builders offer lavish incentives ranging from cash to vehicles to keep workers from heading overseas, and in some cases, illegally employ foreign tradesmen to man projects.

Sri Lanka was left with a massive reconstruc­tion task at the end of the civil war in 2009, with large parts of the north left in ruins by decades of fighting. Annual investment in new homes, roads and ports-which has hovered at around 600 billion rupees ($4 billion) in recent years-is expected to almost triple to $11.6 billion in 2017. But Sri Lanka needs 400,000 new workers-a two-thirds jump from existing levels-to keep up with this surge, said Nissanka Wijeratne, the head of the Chamber of Constructi­on Industry.

“We can’t get that many overnight and we will have to import. We are now facing a serious labor crisis,” he said. Private contractor­s are going to extreme lengths to stop the flow of tradesmen heading to the Gulf for constructi­on jobs, offering bonuses like motorcycle­s and cars to laborers who choose to work on projects back home.

The government has taken a different approach and sought to put curbs on migration by raising the minimum wage requiremen­ts for workers heading overseas. Under their proposal, Sri Lankans will be barred from going abroad for work unless they can show evidence of future earnings amounting to more than $400 per month. “We want to discourage those who go abroad for low pay. Some of these workers can get more money if they stay back in Sri Lanka,” Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke said.

But it is a risky strategy. Roughly one in ten Sri Lankans work abroad and their remittance­s are the number-one foreign exchange earner for the island of 21 million. The pool of money flowing home is growing, with Sri Lankans sending $7.24 billion last year compared with $6.98 billion in 2015. The push to recruit local workers has also suffered due to a cultural stigma surroundin­g blue-collar labour, meaning that Sri Lankans living in the country often choose low-paying office jobs over better remunerate­d opportunit­ies in masonry, carpentry and plumbing.” There is a social perception about constructi­on industry labor, and that is why young people prefer public sector jobs even if they pay much less,” Wijeratne said. “It is about social acceptance.”

‘Illegally employed’

The dearth has spurred some desperate contractor­s to look offshore themselves-not for work but workers. The government estimates roughly 200,000 foreigners are employed illegally in the constructi­on sector. “Foreigners are illegally employed like this because we have a shortage of workers,” urban developmen­t minister Champika Ranawaka said recently.

“I am proposing that the government come up with a policy on foreign workers to regularize this sector.” One company, which declined to be identified, said it was employing foreign workers illegally but noted that many others were doing the same.

Chinese firms, unable to source local labor, have moved armies of constructi­on workers to Sri Lanka to man their mega building projects. Along one of Colombo’s main promenades, hundreds of Chinese workers wait every day for transport home after finishing a shift building towers for a new Shangri-La Hotel. Across the street, their countrymen toil on a vast $1.4 billion real estate developmen­t. Despite unemployme­nt hovering at 4.5 percent at the end of 2016, the crippling labor shortage shows no signs of easing, raising fears that it will put the brakes on economic growth. A large-scale Sri Lankan contractor said he had stopped accepting commission­s to build condos because he couldn’t find tradesmen to finish the job.

The crisis is stretching beyond the constructi­on sector. Sewage and water works projects are struggling to find laborers and are turning to neighborin­g India for workers. Sri Lanka’s lucrative garment industry is also facing a shortage of 50,000 machine operators, and many companies have relocated to Bangladesh in search of cheap labor, according to industry officials. — AFP

 ??  ?? COLOMBO: Chinese constructi­on team members look on at a new apartment building complex in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo. — AFP
COLOMBO: Chinese constructi­on team members look on at a new apartment building complex in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo. — AFP
 ??  ?? COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan constructi­on laborer works on a new apartment building at a complex in Colombo. — AFP
COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan constructi­on laborer works on a new apartment building at a complex in Colombo. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait