Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

A COMMON SENSE ALTERNATIV­E

- By Kusum Wijetillek­e

Ihope to convince the reader that despite some of the commentary, Sri Lanka is not on the road to recovery. Numerous predictabl­y dysfunctio­nal policies with questionab­le rationalis­ations were implemente­d in 2019 and 2020; there was no discernibl­e deliberati­ve process. The underlying fragility of governance that precipitat­ed the collapse is still prevalent. Two years on, the Wickremesi­nghe Government is exhibiting the same tendencies: a concentrat­ion of power in the office of the presidency with the executive holding the critical ministries of finance and defence; this Wickremesi­nghe Government has not materially altered the conditions that led to our crisis.

During an appearance on Newsfirst’s Face the Nation in October last year, Deputy Executive Director of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, Sankhitha Gunaratne noted that Sri Lanka’s was not simply an economic crisis but a “longlastin­g governance crisis… what do we mean when we say governance? We mean checks and balances, separation of powers… decentrali­sation of powers, not further centralisa­tion… we mean the freedom of people to dissent… protest without fear of reprisals… corruption is not just economic crime… abuses of process, conflicts of interest, hiding behind opaque structures, disabling the governance infrastruc­ture of the country, capturing state institutio­ns/ policies/ laws for the interests of a few…”

President Wickremesi­nghe’s commitment to “tough and unpopular decision-making” has been confined to raising taxes within a regressive structure, increasing energy costs, concentrat­ing power in the Executive Presidency and perpetuati­ng ‘Pohottuwa’ control over the Cabinet.

Here is a limited list of difficult decisions the President and the Government have not taken:

■ No changes to the regressive tax structure

■ No top marginal tax rates for large corporates and high net-worth individual­s

■ No significan­t governance overhaul

■ No hiring freeze or employee rationalis­ation within State institutio­ns

■ No investors in the major loss-making SOES

■ No action taken against clear cases of fraud and corruption

■ No accountabi­lity for economic policy decisions taken by the previous government

THE LONG ROAD TO NOWHERE

It is easy to criticise the government and the reader is justified in asking what possible alternativ­es are available to the current economic plan. It is necessary to first acknowledg­e the weaknesses of the current trajectory. Here are some basic propositio­ns:

■ Sri Lanka’s external debt is the result of a multi-decade trade deficit.

■ The economic collapse was precipitat­ed by unfunded tax-cuts rendering our debt stock unsustaina­ble.

■ The context of the ‘Gota tax cuts’ were two decades of failure to raise tax revenue to acceptable levels.

■ Successive government­s failed to efficientl­y manage Sri Lanka’s external debt portfolio, leading to investment­s in higher-risk instrument­s with higher costs (Isbs-internatio­nal Sovereign Bonds)

■ Successive government­s failed to provide a policy framework to develop, diversify and industrial­ise our export sector; the only path to resolve (1) above, is the trade deficit.

■ To industrial­ise and create manufactur­ing industries, Sri Lanka must reduce its costs of production, reduce trade tariffs and join global trade compacts

■ Sri Lanka does not have fiscal space to provide the type of industrial incentives and energy subsidies that attract foreign capital.

■ Sri Lanka cannot develop its economy without a healthy, educated and skilled labour force.

■ Rising inequality, disparity of incomes and wealth; record rates of poverty and malnutriti­on;

■ Failing education and health systems; all significan­t impediment­s to developing productive human capital

I submit that the above, sufficient­ly broad statements are neither conjecture nor opinion, all of these are covered in publicatio­ns by major internatio­nal organisati­ons.

In the early 1990s, Sri Lanka generated tax revenue to GDP of 18-19% with a downward trend ever since. The tax cuts, (3) above, brought this ratio down to 7.4% in 2020.

When President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe was Prime Minister from 2015 to 2019; his government entered into an IMF Programme and committed to raising tax revenue as part of a fiscal consolidat­ion programme. It was against this backdrop that ‘Yahapalana­ya’ delivered perhaps its most progressiv­e piece of legislatio­n; the 2015 one-off super-gains tax on profits over Rs. 2bn for the previous financial year, for individual­s and companies.

Yahapalana­ya also passed the Inland Revenue Act in 2018 and having come to power in 2015, the Wickremesi­nghe Government achieved the following tax revenue to GDP:

11.7% - 2015

11.4% - 2016

11.6% - 2017

11.2% - 2018

The Government of 2015 failed to generate anywhere near the required growth in tax revenues. Today, as Sri Lanka teeters on the brink, policy makers have agreed on a plan with the IMF that imposes a time-restricted fiscal consolidat­ion with tax revenue to GDP projected to reach 15% in each of the three years leading up to 2028.

As per the current program, the IMF’S own projection­s show Sri Lanka with higher Foreign Debt to GDP in 2028 (70%) than we do today (68%) and higher external debt in absolute terms relative to today ($55bn vs. $65bn). The IMF’S plan envisions Sri Lanka regaining access to capital markets, utilising Internatio­nal Sovereign Bonds that left the treasury vulnerable to rollover risks and have now complicate­d our debt restructur­ing negotiatio­ns.

The question remains, where does the current path lead? It has stabilised the economic and social downward spiral while simultaneo­usly allowing the government to return to a business-as-usual setting. It provides assurances to bilateral and private creditors and satisfies the rating agencies. It has also transferre­d the costs of reforms onto a broad section of society, with little effort to target the wealthiest in our economy. Most importantl­y, it has failed to extract even basic concession­s to stronger governance structures.

A GOVERNANCE RESET

President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe is the Cabinet Minister of Finance, Defence, Technology and Women, Child Affairs and Social Empowermen­t. UNP Stalwarts from Akila Viraj Kariyawasa­m (Senior Advisor to the President), Ruwan Wijewarden­e (Presidenti­al Advisor on Climate Change), Vajira Abeywarden­a (National List MP), Sagala Ratanayake (National Security Advisor) have all been elevated into positions of power.

Based on the evidence and trajectory, the current plan is not going to achieve much beyond debt sustainabi­lity, will likely not deliver improvemen­ts to material conditions for the poorest nor generate growth rates that rescue the Sri Lankan middle class. This is not the fault of the IMF. Sri Lanka requires action on revenue and governance that will seem radical but only from a Sri Lankan perspectiv­e, a context of completely incoherent economic policies and damaging incentives. Much of the radical alternativ­e involves common sense checks and balances; a governance reset.

The first step on the path to a Governance Reset is acknowledg­ing and acting upon the situation on the ground. The 2019 tax cuts led to the Treasury losing out on an estimated Rs.700bn of tax revenue in a single year. Where did this money go?

On the one hand, we know that Sri Lanka’s corporates and high-net-worth individual­s do not generate tax revenue at the levels of counterpar­ts in other comparable countries.

On the other hand, we also know, from the United Nations Developmen­t Program (UNDP) research that Sri Lanka is among the top five most unequal countries in the Asia-pacific region; the top 1% of income earners in Sri Lanka own as much as 30% of total private wealth and the bottom 50% of income earners own less than 4% of total private wealth.

These are statistics but anecdotall­y, most people reading this English daily newspaper will have noticed that restaurant­s and retail seem to have traffic, that consumers are out and businesses are getting back on their feet, but you will also notice increased homelessne­ss, closed shops on main roads, buildings with ‘To Let’ signs; all alongside luxury vehicles and two million dollar apartment units.

This is the story of a divergent economy; it is a manifestat­ion of growing disparitie­s in incomes and living standards. Once you accept that (a) the current IMF centred trajectory only provides interim relief for the economy while it achieves debt sustainabi­lity (b) adequate measures have not been taken to eradicate the underlying governance deficits, it is then possible to ascertain the alternativ­es.

Sri Lanka must continue the Imf-prescribed fiscal reforms, SOE divestitur­e and state-sector employee rationalis­ation. Yet, in many other ways, Sri Lanka must reach beyond the IMF program, beginning with a radically different tax structure by raising more revenue from wealth, capital gains, transactio­ns and reducing the burden on the middle class and working people.

If Sri Lanka can increase the tax-to-gdp ratio to closer to 20% instead of the Imf-projected 15%, it allows the Government to pay off debt faster while also funding healthcare and education. A higher tax to revenue base would also allow the Government to provide targeted social protection­s to Sri Lanka’s increasing­ly desperate sections that have fallen below the poverty line.

PEERING OVER THE FENCE

Sri Lanka’s long-term viability depends almost entirely on our ability to increase foreign exchange inflows and address the decades-long trade deficit. While garments, tourism, tea and foreign remittance­s are crucial flows, our economy must generate fresh industrial sectors. Sri Lanka’s export product mix has not diversifie­d since the Premadasa-era garment industry. Many other countries including Vietnam, South Korea, Taiwan and Indonesia considered ‘late-stage’ industrial­isations have followed on from the success of industrial­isation drives in Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong.

Every major Asian economy that might be considered an economic success story has some history of industrial­isation. Take a look at the foreign exchange reserves of some industrial­ised Asian Economies as of March 2024:

GLOBAL TRADE NETWORKS

The countries below Sri Lanka on this list have all industrial­ised their economies to some extent and are part of global trade networks and free trade areas. The accumulati­on of foreign exchange reserves can cushion such economies from major external shocks.

Sri Lanka must integrate with global production networks, so-called production fragmentat­ion; this requires significan­t trade reforms, removal of tariffs and protection­s across sectors and joining free trade agreements such as the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP). It is a delicate project to ensure that foreign capital investment­s in high-technology sectors

also facilitate expertise and technology transfers and benefits; local industry; skill enhancemen­ts; research and developmen­t. This will require targeted, well-defined, limited and non-permanent industrial and energy subsidies to incentivis­e local private capital and foreign investment capital into sectors that the Government deems critical to building high-technology export- oriented sectors.

None of the above can occur unless Sri Lanka’s policy apparatus is free from external coercion of special interest groups and business lobbies; protection­s for some sectors will need to be discontinu­ed. All this only occurs in the context of strict governance and strategic policy planning that is deliberati­ve and based on a multi-level stakeholde­r consensus.

Sri Lanka must continue the Imf-prescribed fiscal reforms, SOE divestitur­e and statesecto­r employee rationalis­ation. Yet, in many other ways, Sri Lanka must reach beyond the IMF program, beginning with a radically different tax structure by raising more revenue from wealth, capital gains, transactio­ns and reducing the burden on the middle class and working people.

The government must ensure there is a protective firewall between policy-making and short-term business imperative­s.this can partly be achieved through better transparen­cy of decisionma­king deliberati­ons and criteria.

Sri Lankan policymake­rs must also look beyond the current dashboard of indicators that are being used to judge the economy to include different measures to track the impacts of policy on specific societal issues; Gross Domestic Product (GDP), currency rates, unemployme­nt, primary account balances are not well-rounded measures of an economy and its underlying societal health.

Sri Lanka should instead focus on improvemen­ts to inequality and income disparitie­s perhaps through gini coefficien­ts or various other indices such as the Inequality-adjusted Human Developmen­t Index. We should measure improvemen­ts to our education system through the availabili­ty of accessible education, or of the healthcare system through health outcomes and quality measures.

I would urge the reader to reconsider the narratives surroundin­g the current trajectory and discourse of stability and progress and consider reasonable alternativ­es from political parties. Sri Lanka can achieve much more if we have strategic policies that are not captive to internatio­nal organisati­ons and local business interests. This is not as elusive as it seems, we have countries that have suffered the same failures resulting from similar structural weaknesses. The difference so far has been that policymake­rs have been unwilling to peek over the fence and learn from the world around us; from Karnataka to Saigon, nations have already generated the blueprints for industrial­ised export developmen­t, Sri Lankan policymake­rs must adapt these so Sri Lanka becomes the new Asian Tiger Economy.

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 ?? ?? Sri Lanka must integrate with global production networks that require trade reforms, removal of tariffs and protection­s across sectors and joining free trade agreements.
Sri Lanka must integrate with global production networks that require trade reforms, removal of tariffs and protection­s across sectors and joining free trade agreements.
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