Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Industrial production slows in Nov. as key segments lose momentum

„IIP drops to 107.3 index points in Nov. 2018, from 108.6 in Nov. 2017 „Statistics office offers no reasons for sharp Oct.nov. fall

-

Sri Lanka’s industrial production slowed in November as the activities or the sub-sectors, which recorded a growth, trailed the ones that contracted over the same month in 2017.

The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) recorded a 108.6 index points in November 2017, compared to 107.3 in November 2018 and 111.0 in October.

The IIP is a measure of the overall health of the industrial production in the manufactur­ing sector and is measured and published by the Census and Statistics Department of Sri Lanka.

The statistics office did not offer any reasons to the sharp fall between October and November, although the businesses turned to a more wait-andsee approach after the political turmoil gripped the nation and the economy becoming its greatest casualty.

The investors fled the country and all three major global rating agencies downgraded Sri Lanka’s sovereign rating due to the heightened refinancin­g risks amid no checks and balances of the government spending as the presentati­on of the budget slated in November was delayed indefinite­ly.

According to the IIP data for November, the production of food products, tobacco products, wood and wood-related products, paper and paper-related products and printing and reproducti­on of recorded media, reported contractio­ns, against the same month in 2017.

Amongst the other sectors that recorded negative performanc­e were chemicals and chemical-related products, pharmaceut­ical and pharmaceut­ical preparatio­ns, other non-metallic mineral products and manufactur­e of electrical equipment, machinery and furniture.

Meanwhile, the beverage production activity improved significan­tly while manufactur­ing of textiles and wearing apparels, leather and related products, coke and refined petroleum products recorded improvemen­ts over the same period last year.

Further, rubber and plastic products, manufactur­e of rubber and plastic products, basic metals and fabricated metal products, picked up from a year earlier.

Sri Lanka’s business and investment confidence remain low amid tight policy and they wait direction from the policymake­rs.

Further, Sri Lanka lacks robust industrial policy and the country missed out on the opportunit­y to become an industrial powerhouse in 1980s and 1980s, during which the East Asian miracle happened, as the country was mired in bad governance triggering racial violence, which led to a three-decade-old war.

Economists say ever since Sri Lanka keeps on missing buses, in a reference to its missing economic opportunit­ies.

Sri Lanka is a US $ 92 billion economy but during the last couple of years, the growth slowed down to below 4.0 percent, due to a mix of policy errors, debt hangover and bad politics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka