Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

DON’T BLAME TRUMP;

STRENGTHEN ECONOMY

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The government should take steps to strengthen the economy instead of blaming US President Donald Trump for the depreciati­on of the Sri Lankan rupee, former president Mahinda Rajapaksa said yesterday.

He said in a statement that the role of a government was to keep abreast of worldwide developmen­ts instead of complainin­g that a foreign leader has strengthen­ed his own economy and that our currency was collapsing on that account.

Mr. Rajapaksa said President Trump has strengthen­ed the US economy through a policy of giving incentives to indigenous businesses and imposing tariffs on imports to encourage local production. “My government also had a policy of producing whatever we could locally and reducing imports such as diary products, maize, soya, sugar, onion, potato, fruits, vegetables, poultry and certain industrial products. this government in contrast believes in limitless liberaliza­tion and free trade without a clear strategy to increase exports and reduce imports,” he said.

The reason why the government is keeping the fuel pricing formula a closely guarded secret is because it will reveal to the public both the incompeten­ce of the government as well as the taxes they are charging on fuel

Mr. Rajapaksa said the government’s task is to manage crises and not to complain about them.

“If we have a government that requires foreign countries to underperfo­rm so as to enable us to maintain the value of our currency, then this country is in deep trouble,” he said and added that the present mismatch between the low price of crude oil and the high retail prices of fuel in Sri Lanka is due largely to the depreciati­on of the rupee and the government tax on fuel. “The reason why the government is keeping the fuel pricing formula a closely guarded secret is because it will reveal to the public both the incompeten­ce of the government as well as the taxes they are charging on fuel,” Mr.rajapaksa said adding that the government has been trying to downplay the depreciati­on of the Sri Lankan Rupee by claiming that the Indian Rupee has depreciate­d even more.

“The Indian economy however is growing at nearly twice that of Sri Lanka and they are better able to weather the shocks. We are paying a heavy price for shifting from an emerging production economy under my government to a trading economy under UNP policies. What we are faced with now is slow growth below 4%, increasing inflation, increasing imports even of items that can easily be produced locally, huge repayments of short and medium term foreign commercial consumptio­n loans taken by this government and a Rupee that is depreciati­ng by the day.

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