Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Eran attributes slow policy implementa­tion to poor public service

- By Shabiya Ali Ahlam

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Finance State Minister Eran Wickramara­tne recently acknowledg­ed the continuing lag in the implementa­tion efforts in the country and said if at all there is an area to be picked for change, it would be the public service.

“If there is a single reform that I have to pick for the country, it is the public service,” said Wickramara­tne, at a panel discussion, during the launch of a World Bank report on Sri Lanka, held in Colombo recently.

Wickramara­tne made this comment while acknowledg­ing that the government, regardless of the regime, is weak in its implementa­tion efforts,

which has led to the continuati­on of issues across diverse areas that could have been ironed out with faster reform and implementa­tion efforts.

“Generally speaking, we are weak on implementa­tion and partially this is to do with the training we get, even in the public sector,” said Wickramara­tne, attributin­g the slowdown of projects to poor human resource developmen­t in the public service.

Wickramara­tne stressed that for implementa­tion, what is imperative are training, investment and exposure, coupled with a comprehens­ive plan that would need to be carried out systematic­ally for at least over a decade.

The minister opined that just as the private sector, the public service too could look at increasing emphasis in the training and developmen­t of its people for better and speedy service delivery.

Wickramara­tne also asserted that implementa­tion is ‘not’ in the hands of politician­s, who are legislator­s but is largely the responsibi­lity of the permanent government, which is engaged in the government service.

The public service has repeatedly come under harsh criticism for its inefficien­cies in the execution and implementa­tion of plans, despite the availabili­ty of resources and budgets.

The sluggish work pace is said to have led to lower productivi­ty, which has spillover effects on the overall performanc­e of the economy.

Taking the implementa­tion of the 2018 budget into considerat­ion, a study by economic think tank Verite Research revealed that the government is way behind its implementa­tion schedule as only 8 percent of the budget promises were fulfilled.

The study points out that about 33 percent of the proposals presented in the 2018 budget were either not implemente­d, neglected or their status is unknown.

 ??  ?? Eran Wickramara­tne
Eran Wickramara­tne

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