Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CPC and CEB: We will all tumble down without reforms

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The Pathfinder Foundation (PF) welcomes the recent adjustment in fuel prices and the anticipate­d further reforms in the power and energy sector. It has advocated institutio­nal changes, competitiv­e industry structures and PPPs as in the case of the telecom sector. The massive accumulate­d losses of these two organizati­ons, amounting to about Rs. 400 billion, have seriously undermined not only the health of the state banks but ultimately public finances as a whole.

The unsustaina­ble losses incurred by CEB and CPC are primarily due to the non passthroug­h of t he internatio­nal prices of oil to consumers and the highly inefficien­t institutio­nal structures of the respective organizati­ons. The subsidy arising from this was kept off the government balance sheet by transferri­ng these losses to the books of the two state banks. The risks associated with the financial fragility of any state bank must ultimately be borne by the government. This means that these contingent liabilitie­s result in the government’s balance sheet being significan­tly worse than indicated by the headline figures given for the budget deficit.

Measures commended

The measures being introduced to arrest the steady hemorrhagi­ng of the financial position of the state banks, and ultimately the government, are therefore much needed. The authoritie­s need to be commended for the price adjustment measures and other anticipate­d structural and institutio­nal reforms of the sector. As evident from experience of Sri Lanka (such as the telecom sector) as well as other countries, benefits for the customers, as well as the government, can be realized through opening up of these sectors to a larger number of participan­ts from the private sector.

Continued adjustment of fuel and electricit­y to reflect the internatio­nal price of oil will address a major part of the problem. However, there are also structural issues which continue to hamper the operationa­l efficiency of these two State Owned Enterprise­s (SOEs) as well as the other sectors which are highly power and energy intensive. The cross subsidizat­ion that currently provides a safety net for lowincome groups (i.e. kerosene subsidy) should continue as direct transfers from the government budget.

Pressure for subsidies: Political challenges

It is important to understand the underlying causes of t he political compulsion­s that make it difficult for Sri Lanka to absorb the internatio­nal price of imported oil. One can identify three reasons for this: macroecono­mic, structural and subsidy addiction. The macroecono­mic explanator­y factor relates to the unsustaina­ble budget deficit that has existed since 1977. It has led to Sri Lanka being a high inflation economy in relation to most of its competitor­s and trading partners. This has meant that the financing costs in the economy have been uncompetit­ive as nomi- nal interest rates have been high. In addition, the inflation differenti­al between Sri Lanka and its competitor­s and trading partners has placed constant pressure on the exchange rate. In a country where the basic consumptio­n bundle has a high import component, the political expedient option has been to maintain an overvalued exchange rate for long periods of time. The negative impact on competitiv­eness of the combined effects of high nominal interest rates and an overvalued exchange rate has, in turn, generated pressure for the subsidizat­ion of fuel and energy as a means of compensati­ng for this.

In the past, Sri Lanka has been able to sustain this non-virtual policy framework because of generous access to concession­al loans and grants. As a lower-middle-income country, that option is no longer available and the headroom for commercial borrowing is also diminishin­g. Sri Lanka now has to bite the bullet and address the underlying problem i.e. the unsustaina­ble budget deficit. However, if Sri Lanka opts for “business as usual” and higher fuel and energy prices are imposed on top of high interest rates and an overvalued exchange rate, large swathes of the productive capacity of the economy would come under pressure and growth would plummet well below the target of 8%; and jobs will be lost.

The structural aspects of the underlying political pressure for subsidized fuel and energy relate to low productivi­ty. Sri Lanka’s productivi­ty is half that of Thailand. Such l ow productivi­ty means that incomes have to be maintained at levels that make it very difficult for a significan­t proportion of the population to absorb the internatio­nal price of oil. It is often i nappropria­tely stated that Sri Lanka has a high cost of living problem. It is more pertinent to say that the country has a low productivi­ty/ low income problem. Incomes can only be increased in a noninflati­onary way through increased productivi­ty.

Since independen­ce Sri Lankans have been made subsidy junkies (addicts) especially with regard to rice and other food items. Following the dramatic internatio­nal oil price increases experience­d from 1972/73 our politician­s have developed the habit of subsidizin­g or cross-subsidizin­g either diesel or kerosene to achieve short-term political gains. This subsidy dependent mentality has been the justificat­ion for maintainin­g highly inefficien­t, wasteful and corrupt structures in the power and energy sector.

Is there a way forward?

The authoritie­s are to be commended for taking action to reverse the massive losses incurred by the CPC and CEB which have severely undermined the liquidity position of the state banks and ultimately the health of the government balance sheet. While welcoming this, it is important that the authoritie­s now move beyond ad hoc piecemeal measures to more comprehens­ive reforms that incorporat­e: 1) broad basing the power sector through opening it up for new players and creating an environmen­t to ensure a competitiv­e pricing mechanism; 2) unbundling of CEB to help identify specific operationa­l and management aspects for efficiency and productivi­ty improvemen­t; 3) further liberalizi­ng Petroleum imports, storage, distributi­on and retailing so that the Ceypetco & IOC duopoly is ended (an internatio­nally renowned Sri Lankan regulatory expert pronounced that the only thing worse than a monopoly is duopoly); 4) further fiscal consolidat­ion, in the medium-term, to transform Sri Lanka into a low-inflation/low-interest rate/stable exchange rate country and therefore, an internatio­nally competitiv­e economy; and 5) structural reforms that generate productivi­ty - induced increases in income levels to enable the population to absorb more easily the internatio­nal prices of oil and other goods. There are both efficiency (growth/ employment) and equity (welfare) considerat­ions for supporting the price increases in fuel and energy with a more ambitious reform package. The adjustment of fuel and energy prices is a necessary but not sufficient condition for placing the Sri Lankan economy on a long-ter m accelerate­d g rowth path that also generates higher value employment.

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