Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

ON GETTING THE (HISTORY OF THE) ECONOMY RIGHT

- By Uditha Devapriya

Following the end of the war, Sri Lanka’s economy grew at dizzying rates, some of the highest recorded in the region and, quite possibly, the world. The investment and consumptio­n boom in the North and East, which had hitherto been shut from the rest of the country, was lavishly and eagerly fuelled by the private sector and sponsored by the government. This resulted in the economy growing at twice the rate it had grown before: in 2009 it grew by 3.4%, while in 2010 and 2011 it would grow respective­ly by 8% and 8.4%. 2012 recorded the highest rate yet, at 9.1%, while in the following year net exports of goods and services rose by an unpreceden­ted 20%.

Sri Lankans never had it so good, and as expected, they went on spending lavishly, with consumptio­n growing by almost 25% from 2012 to 2014. A significan­t portion of their incomes was diverted to foreign products; it was what the late Saman Kelegama referred to in a speech delivered in 2010 as an “importinte­nsive growth”, with exports of goods financing around 63% of those imports. But of course, no one took seriously the ramificati­ons of continuing with such a model. The truth was that no one needed or wanted to. Growth and equity were both rebounding to levels unpreceden­ted in our history, except perhaps for the Premadasa years. It was too good to ignore.

Investment­s came in (their contributi­on to the GDP kept on rising, surpassing even consumptio­n growth rates); roads and highways and flyover bridges were built and unveiled here and there; the Tourist Board, predicting massive tourist arrivals, set a five year target of 22,500 rooms; and the government, flushed with what it felt to be a grand economic success story, went on reaping dividend after dividend, buying over MPS from other parties and thus hijacking the Opposition, solidifyin­g the Executive Presidency, and impeaching the Chief Justice outside the parameters of legality and legitimacy. It then changed the country’s tagline, turning into, not “A Small Miracle” (which the then President rejected), but “The Wonder of Asia.”

We became delighted, then complacent. Elated, we threw caution to the wind.

But as Forbes Magazine put it, “a sugar high does not last long.” Beneath the dazzling growth rates, the rising tourist numbers, and the booming metropolis was a bomb waiting to go off. The signs were all there: investment­s came in, but they were always diverted to the usual projects; the roads and the highways expanded, but motor vehicle registrati­on growth began to surpass population growth; tourist arrivals boomed, but so did stories of molestatio­n, harassment, and (as with Khuram Shaikh) even murder; the government went on reaping dividends, but the impeachmen­t of the Chief Justice and the shooting down of protestors at Weliweriya alienated the intellectu­als and the masses who had fawned on Mahinda Rajapaksa until then.

It had to go downhill somewhere. In the end, it did.

Sri Lanka has been described, not without reason, as an economic basket case. Victor Ivan is one among many commentato­rs who claim that we inherited nationhood from the British, and watched until all those institutio­ns of statehood and nationhood – from the

Victor Ivan’s diagnosis, in that sense, falls a little off the mark: that the blueprint of nationhood which we inherited from the British was not adjusted to suit the needs of an independen­t country. There are two questions that need to be asked here: what is an independen­t country (and more relevantly, were we ever one?), and what were those adjustment­s we had to effect (but presumably did not) when it came to the economy?

Demonising the likes of Donald Trump, Nigel Farage, Boris Johnson, and now Theresa May for the problems wrought in their part of the world by the implementa­tion of policies that predate their arrival in the political scene

I refuse to believe that we can pinpoint one precise, clear-cut reason for the debacle this has resulted in. But commentato­rs continue to do just that

judiciary to the press – were throttled by successive regimes. There is much to disagree with that view, but I think we can agree on the point that, whether or not the British gave us something we could call a nation, we merely let things go from bad to worse. Sri Lanka’s history after independen­ce has thus been one of not just missed opportunit­ies, but also misinterpr­eted, misused fortunes.

I refuse to believe that we can pinpoint one precise, clear-cut reason for the debacle this has resulted in. But commentato­rs continue to do just that, be it the lack of insight among our leaders (Victor Ivan), the myth that government interventi­on is the answer to our problems (Advocata), the lack of “the vision thing” in political parties (Asanga Welikala), the Hobson’s choice between “clowns and murderers” the system throws up (Tisaranee Gunasekera), and the prevalence of bigotry, among the Buddhist public predominan­tly, which dwarfs action under ideology (Professor H. L. Seneviratn­e in his study, The Work of Kings).

This, I think, is the easy way out; as easy, in fact, as demonising the likes of Donald Trump, Nigel Farage, Boris Johnson, and now Theresa May for the problems wrought in their part of the world by the implementa­tion of policies that predate their arrival in the political scene. What it eventually results in is a demonisati­on of the political and the ideologica­l, sustained to such an extent that “civil society” keeps on calling for an alternativ­e system shorn of politics and ideology. Quite apart from the fact that such a utopic system does not exist, it promotes the (undemocrat­ic?) idea of substituti­ng unelected profession­als for elected representa­tives.

Victor Ivan’s diagnosis, in that sense, falls a little off the mark: that the blueprint of nationhood which we inherited from the British was not adjusted to suit the needs of an independen­t country. There are two questions that need to be asked here: what is an independen­t country (and more relevantly, were we ever one?), and what were those adjustment­s we had to effect (but presumably did not) when it came to the economy? The picture of Sri Lanka that emerges from the answers to these is not the picture that commentato­rs usually paint, and for very good reasons.

Constituti­onally, legally, politicall­y, economical­ly, and culturally, we were not an independen­t state after 1948, and we continued to be tied to British interests even after the 1956 election and the coming to power of the much vilified Bandaranai­kes. The economy of the country centred on the plantation­s and the estates which, despite the election of populists, continued virtually unscathed. George Beckford in his extensive study, Persistent Poverty, rightly contends that the establishm­ent and consolidat­ion of these plantation­s in colonial societies led to their social benefits surpassing, or at least equalling, their social costs, while their later maturity led to the reverse, to the extent of promoting “a persistent tendency towards underdevel­opment.”

This was true of Sri Lanka also: the consolidat­ion of the plantation sector led to the fragmentat­ion of the peasantry (especially in the hill country) the emergence of ethnic conflicts, the privilegin­g of metropolit­an (urban) interests over rural interests (which explains why 40% to 45% of industrial activity, despite several Board of Investment initiative­s in peripheral regions, is concentrat­ed in the Western Province today), and the emergence of a political class that remained neutral towards the plantation sector (despite populist pressures, the government “forbade the fragmentat­ion” of estates in 1958 and “promised not to nationalis­e” them for at least 10 years in 1961).

Industrial developmen­t in a country, regardless of the political model, usually follows four stages: developmen­t of the agricultur­al sector, urbanisati­on fuelled by factories, transfer from the rural (traditiona­l) to the urban (modern) sector, and emergence of a services sector connected to industry. The initial takeoff is important; for instance, it was the agricultur­al revolution sparked by Jethro Tull’s plough that turned the North West and the Midlands of England into industrial enclaves.

The problem with Sri Lanka, and most other colonial societies, is that we were forced to jump over and bypass several stages in the developmen­t chart. There was never, for one thing, a “takeoff” from the primary to the secondary sector so characteri­stic of the economic history of the “modern liberal states” that the likes of Victor Ivan speak so warmly of; more importantl­y, nor was there a class of industrial­ists whose interests were aligned with the need to transform the economy.

When James Peiris remarked in 1908 that “the interests of the Ceylonese planters are identical with those of the European planters”, he was stating an economic truth. In fact in the colonial era it was only the petty and rural bourgeoisi­e, which interestin­gly never became a force to reckon with or contend against, that clashed with the planters. We are talking about a period in which every conceivabl­e institutio­n – from banks to schools to railway systems to road networks – were built with the aim of making life easier for the planters and their (primitive) model of developmen­t.

The Waste Land Ordinances that the colonial government enacted facilitate­d this at the cost of a flourishin­g peasantry. Ivan faults the locals for not combating the feudal practices rampant at the time of colonialis­m, but as is typical of such generalisa­tions, he fails to account for the bigger picture: we were not given an opportunit­y to develop an economy that could outgrow those practices. Instead, we got an economy inhabited by a plantation class, with absentee landlordis­m, unplanned urbanisati­on, emulation of Western consumptio­n patterns, and cultural imitativen­ess being the norm.

So no, we were never really economical­ly free. We still aren’t.

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