Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Mystery gazette on G-secs unravelled

„CB Governor says gazette is part of an obsolete, impractica­l law „Despite impractica­lity, CB complied with the spirit of law „“All securities issued by the government of Sri Lanka are absolutely safe”- CB Governor „Finmin blames former regime for not ame

- By Chandeepa Wettasingh­e

The recently surfaced mystery gazette notificati­on with regard to government securities (G-secs) is part of an obsolete law, which the Central Bank has been attempting to comply with, and the law would be amended as soon as possible, the country’s economic managers said yesterday.

Central Bank Governor Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswa­my said that gazetting G-sec issuances at the start of a year would have been practical under the administra­tive basis with which the government had issued G-secs from 1930s, when the Registered Stocks and Securities Ordinance No. 07 of 1937 was introduced, till 1997 when the auctions started.

“Once the operations in issuing the government securities gets a market dimension, it becomes impractica­l to give advanced notificati­on on how much will be accepted and what the interest rate would be, because once the market forces are introduced into the system, there is more uncertaint­y and variabilit­y,” he said.

He said the government­s had been able to follow the ordinance in the past since the government­s were able to decide the amount, tenures and interest rates of G-secs at the start of the year, depending on the country’s requiremen­t for the year.

However, Dr. Coomaraswa­my noted that despite the impractica­lity, the Central Bank has complied with the spirit of the ordinance by providing the public with as much informatio­n as possible about G-secs.

“The Monetary Board has been publishing the details of the auctions on national newspapers and since the technology became available, on the website, so the Central Bank has substantia­lly complied with the ordinance,” he said.

He added that the Central Bank each year has reserved a gazette number from the Government Printer and after issuing all debt for a year, published the details backdated to January 1, 2015, which meant that for that specific year, the then Finance Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa’s name would have appeared on the gazette.

Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke said that the government was not attempting to divert any blame of the bond scandal to Rajapaksa but remained critical of Rajapaksa continuing to circumvent the ordinance instead of amending it. “When our government became aware of the situation, I immediatel­y asked the Government Printer not to publish the gazette for 2016. These gazettes have not come either to the finance minister or the treasury secretary for approval,” he said.

He noted that the gazettes had been prepared by the officials in the Central Bank below the level of the Debt Department Superinten­dent and that it was also unusual that the gazette for 2015, which should have been sent for printing in December 2015, had been sent in November 2016. “Why has the hyperactiv­e Auditor General not found this?” Karunanaya­ke questioned.

Both Dr. Coomaraswa­my and Karunanaya­ke said that while the legality of the process would be determined later, all the G-secs issued in the past are valid and that the investors should not be worried.

“All securities issued by the government of Sri Lanka are absolutely safe; they continue to be risk-free and the government of Sri Lanka is fully behind them. So no one should be concerned about the validity of government securities,” Dr. Coomaraswa­my explained.

Karunanaya­ke said that the ordinance would be amended as soon as possible and if the amendments cannot be completed by March 15, when the bonds would next be issued, an administra­tive solution would be taken and the details of the auction would be gazetted on the following day.

 ??  ?? Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke (left) and Central Bank Governor Indrajit Coomaraswa­my at the press briefing PIC BY PRADEEP PATHIRANA
Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke (left) and Central Bank Governor Indrajit Coomaraswa­my at the press briefing PIC BY PRADEEP PATHIRANA

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