Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

PPP process not functionin­g properly, says govt.’s PPP boss

- By Shabiya Ali Ahlam

„

The Finance Ministry’s Public-private Partnershi­p (PPP) unit chief yesterday pointed out that the PPP process is not functionin­g at its best capacity and the relevant stakeholde­rs could look at exploring new options in improving the situation that in-turn would help boost the overall economic growth of the country.

“The PPP process is not working efficientl­y. We are using limited option for fiscal consolidat­ion; we are not looking at enough opportunit­ies,” said the Finance Ministry’s PPP Unit Chairman Thilan Wijesinghe delivering the keynote address at the seventh Capital Market Conference, organised by UTO Edu Consult, in Colombo, yesterday.

According to him, there should be implementa­tion priorities that should create a virtuous circle of investor confidence, private capital inflows, state-owned enterprise (SOE) and capital market reforms deepening to reduce fiscal dependency on the Treasury.

He said possible measures that could be explored in this regard include divestures, public listing of strategic minority stakes, restructur­ing via transactio­n advisers and pushing executive committees of the SOE boards to implement restructur­ing.

Wijesinghe also opined that the current government “does not have any low hanging fruits” to generate economic growth and that is primarily due to the inability to focus on the micro level problems and execution.

“We have a fantastic Central Bank, a great brain thrust in the Finance Ministry but we are failing at the micro level, planning, problem-solving and execution,” he asserted.

Wijesinghe professed that if getting the micro-level aspects right, Sri Lanka can move from the current low GDP growth of 2 to 3 percent to 6 to 7 percent by focusing on sectors such as tourism, ports and shipping, aviation, logistics-based manufactur­ing, knowledge-based services such as IT, financial services and agri business.

Furthermor­e, he asserted that the measures need to be taken to accelerate the implementa­tion of bilateral trade agreements.

At present, Sri Lanka has over US $ 7 billion worth PPPS in operation, with the largest being Colombo Port City.

 ??  ?? Thilan Wijesinghe
Thilan Wijesinghe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka