Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

DEFLATIONA­RY POLICIES FOR DEBT REPAYMENT

World Bank and the IMF are not unaware of the economic devastatio­n caused by their policies

- By Ahilan Kadirgamar

The World Bank and the IMF Spring meetings begin this week in Washington. And with the worst sovereign debt crisis in decades, the pronouncem­ents at these meetings will be monitored closely by many for the relief that debtdistre­ssed countries in the Global South can expect. However, regardless of what is discussed and announced, the policies of the World Bank and the IMF will continue to safeguard the interests of global finance capital to the detriment of the social and economic lives of the people affected by the debt crisis.

It was exactly two years ago and just days ahead of the annual meetings in Washington that Sri Lanka defaulted on its external debt. At the time, the Ministry of Finance announced its intention to pursue debt restructur­ing “consistent with an economic adjustment programme supported by the IMF.” The IMF programme itself was not approved until a year later in March 2023. Meanwhile, debt restructur­ing with Sri Lanka’s bilateral and commercial creditors is yet to be completed. Neverthele­ss, according to the Director General of the Presidenti­al Secretaria­t, Sri Lanka has repaid the debt owed to the

and other multilater­al creditors, amounting to a total of billion since July 2022.

How is it possible for Sri Lanka to repay such debt in the interim, and where is Sri Lanka’s economy headed on this path of debt restructur­ing? I address below the dangerous deflationa­ry policies imposed by the World Bank and IMF, to ensure that Sri Lanka can repay its creditors and resume commercial borrowing from the global financial markets – the main culprit of the debt crisis – in the future.

Asian Developmen­t Bank, World Bank, IMF

USD 1.4 WORLD BANK UPDATE

Of course, the World Bank and the IMF are not unaware of the economic devastatio­n caused by their policies. But even as the heads of their institutio­ns sound alarm bells for the global economy and call for stimulus as a response in Washington, double standards in policies applied to developing countries result in more austerity. Worse, even as the reports by Internatio­nal Financial Institutio­ns (IFIS) on Sri Lanka elucidate the dynamics of economic contractio­n, they neverthele­ss push for policies that compound the same terrible economic trajectory.

The World Bank’s Sri Lanka Developmen­t Update launched earlier this month describes the worrying situation for working people in the country:

“Worsening labour market trends continue to pose further risks to household welfare. The closure of businesses, especially micro, small and medium enterprise­s, contribute­d to a contractio­n in Labour Force Participat­ion (LFP) to 49.8 percent in 2022 from 52.3 percent in 2019 … the LFP rate in urban areas continues to worsen (45.2 percent in Q3 2023), and total LFP remains below pre-pandemic levels. … Furthermor­e, 45.8 percent of employed individual­s experience­d a pay/ allowance cut or income loss, 48 percent experience­d a reduction in working hours, and 47.3 percent experience­d a work break or temporary absence

since March 2022. Approximat­ely 60 percent of all households also reported a reduction in income. … Almost threefourt­hs of households have limited their expenditur­e or changed their diets in response to higher living costs.”

Even those who are employed in Government jobs are hit hard. The only Government expenditur­e in nominal rupees that declined between 2022 and 2023 was its salaries and wages bill by 2.4%. This is while Government expenditur­e as a whole increased by 38.5% with inflation during that period. The World Bank also notes that cement consumptio­n in Sri Lanka has dropped below half of what it was five years ago as constructi­on projects including those by the Government have been brought to a halt. That means all those people who depend on building wage labour have lost more than half their work.

There is other data that one can mention here. The Petroleum Dealers’associatio­n claims diesel and petrol consumptio­n in 2024 has dropped by 35% to 45% compared to pre-pandemic levels. Almost one million households in the country, or a fifth of the population, have been disconnect­ed from the electricit­y grid over the last two years. These indicators reflect the consequenc­es of severe austerity measures such as the major interest rate hikes, market pricing of energy, and cuts to state subsidies. Indeed, such austerity policies constitute the pillars of the World Bank and IMF recovery path set for Sri Lanka.

ACCUMULATI­ON BY DISPOSSESS­ION

The hawkish attitude of the World Bank and the IMF towards inflation and deficit spending contains its own logic. The Central Bank’s policy rate of 16.5% last year and targets of primary budget surplus drasticall­y reducing government expenditur­e have culminated in the Sri Lankan rupee appreciati­ng against the US dollar by 7.8% during the first quarter of 2024. These deflationa­ry policies have resulted in year-on-year inflation in March collapsing to 0.9% and the Colombo Consumer Price Index declining by 1.9% in March from February. Austerity measures have repressed the wages and purchasing capacity of working people leading to prices falling. As a result, there is far less effective demand to incentiviz­e local production. In other words, Sri Lanka’s economy is in free fall.

These deflationa­ry dynamics, however, serve the interests of external creditors and global finance capital more broadly. The Central Bank has been purchasing US dollars to increase foreign reserves, which in and of itself is not bad for the country. But the question is, towards what end?

The USD 1.4 billion in debt repayment of multilater­al debt over the last twenty months is a case in point, with dollars spent on debt servicing rather than stimulus for local production thus reducing the import bill. The logic of paying off debt increases the confidence of global financiers while ignoring developmen­t objectives. In this context, speculativ­e foreign inflows into the Colombo Stock Exchange are turning around. In February 2024, they reached USD 42 million, reaching levels just before the economic crisis two years earlier. But from experience we know that such finance capital can just as easily fly out.

The World Bank Update states: “A sufficient­ly deep debt restructur­ing is needed to restore Sri Lanka’s debt sustainabi­lity and regain access to internatio­nal financial markets.” Indeed, countries like Sri Lanka need a major reduction in their debt stock and even debt cancellati­on. But the question is whether it is towards reintegrat­ion with the internatio­nal financial markets or the growth and welfare of Sri Lanka’s economy and its people. Despite the lip service of the World Bank and IMF towards debt restructur­ing, the reality is one of minimal debt reduction. Meanwhile, much of the burden of this adjustment is placed on the working people.

NEAR-TERM ADJUSTMENT

This trajectory is not only reflected in the near-term adjustment of the economy. The World Bank’s longer-term policies for Sri Lanka betray an even more cynical agenda. While labour force participat­ion is declining across the board because of the economic crisis, the recent situation of urban labour relative to rural labour reflects working people’s initiative­s towards survival and stability through a focus on the rural economy and food production. However, the World Bank’s well-funded agricultur­al modernizat­ion policies call for uprooting rural folk off their land. The World Bank claims that displaced cultivator­s can find work in the urban sectors, with such land handed over to more productive agribusine­sses. Meanwhile, there are no jobs in the urban sectors and the agribusine­ss enterprise­s may not even take up production depending on the whims of global agricultur­al markets. In this way, such policies in the long run will only compound the effects of Sri Lanka’s economic depression.

The deflationa­ry policies of the World Bank and IMF serve the accumulati­on of global financial capital through integratio­n with internatio­nal markets. And for that, they are even turning to raid the rural economy. These deflationa­ry policies only serve to deepen the logic of neoliberal­ism at the heart of the global debt crisis. Lessons about deflation and the tremendous suffering of the Great Depression of the 1930s are disregarde­d when they believe the crisis is limited to a few small countries. What is at stake for the working people of Sri Lanka is their livelihood­s, food, and indeed the very survival of their next generation.

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