Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Labour shortage could cripple exports, warns chamber

„National Chamber of Exporters says the issue has industrywi­de implicatio­ns „Constructi­on sector already negotiatin­g to bring labour from abroad „Three-wheeler economy, migration and fast ageing population cited as reasons

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The shortage of labour— skilled or unskilled—is cited as the number one limiting factor faced by Sri Lanka’s export-oriented manufactur­ers, when they met the press at a recently held media round table and this issue has forced many of the manufactur­ers to operate with sizable spare capacity.

According to the National Chamber of Exporters of Sri Lanka (NCE), the apex private sector body representi­ng the exporter community, the skill dearth is so acute here that it is having industry-wide implicatio­ns.

Sri Lanka’s constructi­on sector has been the worst affected by the limited availabili­ty of labour when the economy started rebuilding its roads, bridges, factories and hotels across the country after the war ended.

NCE President Ramal Jasinghe said the constructi­on sector is negotiatin­g to bring labour from abroad because the sector is reeling from acute labour shortage for years.

“We hear the constructi­on sector is negotiatin­g to import labour”, said Jasinghe.

According to the existing law, foreign labour cannot be imported except for in the case of several specific sectors, where specialize­d talent cannot be found in Sri Lanka such as ship builders or unless a firm is a Board of Investment registered entity.

But the shortage of labour is now being experience­d by many other industries such as shoe manufactur­ing, toy manufactur­ing, textile and garments, plantation­s and spices and allied products. “We have cinnamon exporters in our membership and they complain that they could not find cinnamon peelers anymore”, NCE Secretary General/ CEO Siham Marikar said.

Ceylon Cinnamon is identified as the world’s best and has high demand from many countries and fetches higher prices.

Jasinghe opined that Sri Lanka’s actual unemployme­nt level has to be probably below the reported level of 4.2 percent. An unemployme­nt level of around 4.0 percent is often cited as near full employment level in an economy. The so-called three wheeler economy, migration and fast ageing population are often cited as the reasons for the present day labour woes faced by Sri Lankan enterprise­s.

However, Jasinghe said one cannot expect a person to abandon his threewheel­er for an employment in an organizati­on before a concrete strategy is formulated for skills developmen­t from the very beginning.

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