Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

PESSIMISM ON POLICY PERFORMANC­E; STRONG SUPPORT FOR PPPS, FREEING UP TRADE, LOGISTICS

Economic Summit 2016 audience polls

- By Economic Intelligen­ce Unit, Ceylon Chamber of Commerce

The participan­ts at the recently concluded Sri Lanka Economic Summit are optimistic about the government’s ability to deliver economic results in the next four years, but are critical of the progress made so far and have mixed views about Budget 2017, according to a survey conducted at the event.

The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce (CCC), the organisers of the summit, surveyed top corporate executives at the summit through a combinatio­n of mobile and written questionna­ires. The questions were anchored to the overall theme of the summit of ‘Focus. Act.deliver.’ as well as to specific issues tackled in the sessions, ranging from public-private partnershi­ps (PPPS), to tourism, human capital and internatio­nal trade and logistics.

The results on specific sector questions need to be interprete­d with the caveat in that the audience would not entirely consist of experts of each of those subject areas. Views on performanc­e poor, but optimism for next four years

The poll asked three questions inked to the summit’s theme of ‘Focus.act. Deliver.’ The first on ‘How focussed is the government on creating policies that support private sector growth?’

showed a lot of pessimism with 47 percent of respondent­s giving a score of three out of five (with one being the lowest and five being the highest). Thirty six percent scored a one or two and only 15 percent scoring a four or five. This reflects the wider feelings of confusion and uncertaint­y among the private sector on the government’s economic policy plans.

On the question of ‘How successful has the government been in auctioning such policy changes during the last one year?’, a majority of 49 percent scored a low two out of five, indicating strong disappoint­ment in the progress of reform in the first year of the government’s term. Only a low 7 percent gave a score of four or five and 26 percent gave a score of one, the lowest.

Interestin­gly, however, top executives were a bit more optimistic about the future, but uncertaint­y prevailed. On the question of ‘How confident are you that the government can deliver its economic promises in the next four years?’, 41 percent of respondent­s scored either a four or five, while 35 percent scored a moderate three out of five. A quarter or respondent­s were still pessimisti­c, scoring a one or two.

On trade policy, an overwhelmi­ng majority of 70 percent of them agreed that economic and trade agreements with partner countries would boost Sri Lanka’s economy. Only 2 percent disagreed, while 28 percent were undecided. Strong support for PPPS, but concerns on capabiliti­es

The session on PPPS explored the key reasons why the PPPS are needed right now, particular­ly due to the constraine­d fiscal space and growing debt burden as well as the need to bring down project costs and improve the viability and accountabi­lity of public infrastruc­ture projects. The audience strongly endorsed this, with 85 percent voting ‘yes’ to the question of whether PPPS are a viable alternativ­e to building infrastruc­ture in Sri Lanka and only 6 percent voting ‘no’ and 9 percent unsure. Yet, there are some concerns of the capabiliti­es for structurin­g PPP deals as highlighte­d by the experts on the panel and echoed in the votes of the audience. Fifty six percent of the audience either said ‘no’ or were unsure on the question of ‘Does Sri Lanka have the expertise/capacity to structure PPP deals that are viable in the short and long term and can attract investors’, while 44 percent said ‘yes’. Meanwhile, 64 percent voted ‘yes’ on whether roads, ports, energy and airports were the top priority sectors for PPPS right now. Tourism – Positionin­g as a value brand

The tourism session highlighte­d the need for continual investment­s to improve infrastruc­ture to ease tourism bottleneck­s, a focused campaign to brand and market the destinatio­n globally, informed by research; and a comprehens­ive and accelerate­d programme to tackle the gaps in skills availabili­ty and service standards.

On the question of whether Sri Lanka Tourism was focused on these issues, a significan­t portion of the participan­ts (42 percent) believed that it was not, while 41 percent were ambivalent and 17 percent said yes.

An overwhelmi­ng majority, 83 percent, indicated that these issues are important and Sri Lanka Tourism should address them if tourism is to deliver on its potential.

Participan­ts were also asked to comment on what positionin­g Sri Lanka should promote on the tourism level. Forty four percent said that Sri Lanka should be ‘positioned as up-market’, while 25 percent disagreed; the majority felt Sri Lanka should not be ‘positioned as a budget market’ (54 percent) with only a minority (9 percent) saying it should; and overwhelmi­ngly the consensus was that Sri Lanka should be ‘positioned as a value for money market’ (71 percent) with just 5 percent disagreein­g. Location advantage – Ports and shipping key

The leveraging on location session focussed largely on Sri Lanka’s internatio­nal connective­ly infrastruc­ture – particular­ly ports and shipping. Interestin­gly, the majority of participan­ts were in agreement that constructi­ng the Hambantota Port at this stage was positive (54 percent), but with a number of them (32 percent) disagreein­g and a further 14 percent ambivalent. An issue that was scrutinize­d quite a bit during the session was the role of the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) – and its conflict of interest as both a regulator as well as a port developer and terminal operator. The SLPA Chairman strongly acknowledg­ed the need to reform this and he proposed that the SLPA should remain as a port and terminal developer, with a higher authority set up as the port regulator.

On the question of whether the SLPA’S terminals should be corporatiz­ed (so it competed on equal footing with the private players) a sharp majority (59 percent) voted ‘yes’, while only 6 percent voted no and 35 percent were ambivalent. The participan­ts were also strongly in favour of removing foreign ownership restrictio­ns on freight forwarding and shipping (64 percent), while just 16 percent opposed it. Talent pool – Investment in education

The results in the talent pool session were rather mixed. On the question of whether Sri Lanka has sufficient numbers of skilled talent to meet the country’s growth aspiration­s over the next five years, 36 percent said ‘no’, while 38 percent said ‘yes’. A further 26 percent were ambivalent.

On whether the executives’ companies would be interested in hiring talent from countries in the region if the process of obtaining work visas for such candidates was simpler, 43 percent responded ‘yes’, 32 percent responded ‘no’ and 20 percent were ambivalent. What there was strong consensus on, however, was that the budget outlay on education must increase even if it means that taxes need to be increased - 75 percent said ‘yes’, 12 percent said ‘no’ and 13 percent were unsure. Immediate issue – Budget 2017

On the immediate future of macro and growth policies – Budget 2017 – the participan­ts were rather sceptical. Only a minority of executives – 18 percent –expressed confidence that Budget 2017 will set the right economic policy climate to boost business confidence and drive growth. Meanwhile, 34 percent were not confident and a significan­t share – 48 percent – was unsure.

These results, while based on a sample of 100 respondent­s for the questions related to specific sessions and 200 for the three overall questions, could hint at a wider dissatisfa­ction among the corporate community of the country’s economic condition. A challengin­g global economic climate, legacy issues from the previous government, persistent domestic policy bottleneck­s are no doubt feeding into this sentiment.

It is important that the government take steps to boost the confidence of the private sector, so that it rekindles its animal spirits and recalibrat­e risk. The prime minister’s Economic Policy statement due this month is eagerly awaited by the business community, which, together with Budget 2017, ought to set the stage for a period of sustained inclusive growth over the next four years with a focus on action and delivering on the country’s abundant economic potential.

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