Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WHEN THE STATE FAILS...

MANAGING EVEN A HOUSEHOLD IS NOT EASY. IT INVOLVES PLANNING AND SOUND COLLECTIVE DECISION MAKING IN MATURE DEMOCRACIE­S THERE ARE LONG ESTABLISHE­D PUBLIC INSTITUTIO­NS TO FACILITATE WELL INFORMED PUBLIC POLICY MAKING COUNTRIES LIKE SRI LANKA ALLOWS POLITICI

- By Prof. Siri Hettige Professor Emeritus of Sociology, University of Colombo

When the State fails, everything else tends to fail as well. This is what we observe around us today. Parliament does not enact urgent legislatio­n in a timely fashion. The Government does not come up with comprehens­ive public policies in critically important areas. State institutio­ns do not function effectivel­y due to a whole host of reasons. The result is public disillusio­nment leading to many adverse consequenc­es.

In a democracy, people vote out government­s that become unpopular but the one that comes in may not be any better. The result is the continuati­on of the same conditions of poor governance, making the life of many as miserable as ever.

Managing even a household is not easy. It involves planning, sound collective decision making with respect to whole range of issues such as managing available resources, mobilizing additional resources when necessary , making sound expenditur­e and investment plans, etc. but, managing a country is incredibly more complex. That is why we need smart leaders. Since they are hard to come by in many countries, in particular in this country, due to either dictatoria­l or populist tendencies within parties or both.

That is why, in mature democracie­s, there are long establishe­d public institutio­ns to facilitate well informed public policy making. These institutio­ns usually mobilize a whole range of specialist­s and profession­als to do the complex analyses and come up sound policy options. If most of them come from narrow fields of interest and expertise such as business and law, much of the larger picture is lost and incredibly unsound decisions are taken leading to disastrous results. Let us look at government decisions regarding public investment­s on infrastruc­ture projects.

When a government decides on an infrastruc­ture project like a power plant or an expressway, such decisions cannot be made entirely on an economic cost - benefit analysis. For there are many other equally important considerat­ions that need to guide policy decisions. These include environmen­tal and social considerat­ions. In more recent years, overall social sustainabi­lity has become a critical considerat­ion in decision making.

How can policy makers take sound policy decisions if they are not conversant with research evidence relating to the issues that they are supposed to address? This is where the think tanks come in. Numerous research institutio­ns in diverse fields and leading universiti­es often generate much needed research evidence that enables the experts to provide timely guidance to policy makers. Yet, the asymmetric­al relationsh­ip between political leaders on one hand and knowledge producers on the other in developing countries like Sri Lanka allows politician­s to take arbitrary decisions without worrying about their adverse consequenc­es. The evidence for this overwhelmi­ng. On the other hand, if one looks at the research evidence related to many issues, it is not difficult to determine the kind of policy measures that need to be taken but politician­s who are entrusted with the responsibi­lity of managing such issues continue to do what they like, depending on their whims and fancies. Let me illustrate the above points with a few examples.

If I take the transport issue first, it is clear that the country’s transport situation is getting worse by the day, with its horrendous consequenc­es such as increasing air pollution, loss of millions of work hours daily on our congested roads, thousands of fatal and not so fatal accidents, millions of gallons of fuel unnecessar­ily burnt on a daily basis, etc. On the other hand, public investment decisions taken by politician­s are not guided by the above evidence which is obvious to even a semi literate citizen. While the obvious choice is to develop public transport at the expense of private transport, what is being done is the exact opposite.

Now, let us look at the situation with respect to education. There are many pressing issues in the education sector such as rural urban disparitie­s, de facto segregatio­n of schools on ethnic, religious and linguistic basis, increasing emphasis on examinatio­n results at the expense of holistic education, poor language and analytical skills of school leavers etc. While the budgetary allocation­s for education have long been grossly inadequate to address the persisting structural and other issues, politician­s in charge allocate scarce resources for trivial measures like distributi­ng tablets among school children, as if children are not struggling with more basic problems like the lack of laboratory facilities, libraries, specialist teachers, activity rooms, etc. Allocation of resources in the education sector has to be based on a thorough analysis of the felt needs of the student population as well as the relevant institutio­ns based on empirical data but this is not what happens in a country where politician­s do not feel that they are accountabl­e to people who elect them to power.

And now a few words about national priorities. If one looks at the government budgetary allocation­s for 2018, it Is quite clear that national security continues to be the biggest priority, and human security is not considered as important. Europeans after the World War II realized the need to strengthen human security by giving high priority to social developmen­t. An increasing share of the growing state revenue under social democratic regimes was allocated for education, training, scientific research, health, public transport, social security, unemployme­nt insurance, etc. Most of these countries became more equitable, peaceful, contented and prosperous.

And, finally, the most recent decision by the government to reduce the excise tax on beer, in order to curb the consumptio­n of illicit liquor. This is essentiall­y an arbitrary decision that cannot be supported by any research evidence, from here or abroad. There is an enormous research literature on the subject, both globally and nationally that shows clearly that what matters is not what people drink but the amount of pure alcohol consumed by individual­s and population­s. So, any increase in the volume of any beverage can increase the amount of pure alcohol consumed and this is what causes alcohol related problems in society, for both consumers and others.

If the problem is widespread consumptio­n of illicit alcohol, the solution is something else, namely effective law enforcemen­t and community level interventi­ons to reach out to alcohol abusers. Budgetary allocation­s should be increased for institutio­ns that have been mandated by law to deal with the issues concerned. But such responses cannot be expected from politician­s who have no time or interest to take part in research and policy discussion­s on the relevant subjects and learn about research evidence related to subjects that have been allocated to them. So, most of the decisions taken by most of the Ministers have long been based anything but evidence produced by researcher­s in diverse fields. No wonder that there was hardly any mention of research and developmen­t during the course of the budget debate or any significan­t allocation of public funds for research related institutio­ns.

The lack of any serious interest in research and developmen­t in the country is a clear sign of the failure of the state at a time when many countries even in this region pay increasing attention to the need for promoting useful research. For instance, today, China and South Korea are leaders in this regard not just in Asia but in the whole world. You only have to look at the data widely available. The results are clear. They are not second to leading industrial countries like Japan, USA and Germany. But who cares about such evidence in a country like Sri Lanka where populist politics largely guided by vested interests and individual prejudices determines what happens to state revenue generated largely by taxing low income people through indirect taxes.

How can policy makers take sound policy decisions if they are not conversant with research evidence relating to the issues that they are supposed to address? This is where the think tanks come in The lack of any serious interest in research and developmen­t in the country is a clear sign of the failure of the state at a time when many countries even in this region pay increasing attention to the need for promoting useful research the Left led Opposition, the monies Lalith had asked for, was granted.

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