Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Addressing the gap between the Haves and Have-nots

- BY DINESH WEERAKKODY (The writer is a thought leader)

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa speaking at the 72nd Independen­ce Day ceremony at Independen­ce Square said “The public will only achieve true freedom when social and economic inequaliti­es are minimized”.

Even today, he said “there is a large gap between the haves and have-nots in our society. To emphasize this point the President said the facilities that are available in our urban centers are lacking in rural areas and that the education facilities and Healthcare facilities are not equal in most areas.

Further he pointed out that job opportunit­ies have not spread to all regions and these inequaliti­es are not due to racial or religious reasons, these are common problems that the country faces.

Address the economic problems first

However he noted for strengthen­ing the ability for people to live freely, we must first address the economic problems that affect the public. That is why he asserted that the eradicatio­n of poverty is a top priority of the Government.

As a country to get to the next phase of developmen­t to address these issues we need to first get out of the middle income trap. According to IMF and other data Sri Lanka in the last ten years has added US$ 37 billion to the GDP, while Vietnam added US$ 158 billion and Bangaledes­h US$ 217 billion.

Taiwan with a Similar population like Sri Lanka added US$ 107 billion. One of the main reason Sri Lanka has got caught up in the middle income trap ( The middle-income trap is the situation in which a country’s growth slows after reaching middle income levels) is because we are not investing sufficient­ly in early childhood developmen­t and skilling its workforce properly. If this segment is helped with targeted education loans or given other support they will get the skills that they want. This has been a critical element of other countries that have broken out of the middle income trap. Also the current poverty alleviatio­n programs needs to be resourced creatively because they provided too few funds to make a genuine impact on the lives of recipients.

Global experience

Most countries around world struggle to implement good policies and only a few have succeeded in reaching high-income status and sustaining that growth. Take Turkey, which was growing towards high-income status but then experience­d a huge slowdown, or Argentina, which reached highincome status but fell again to middle-income status because of policy and political uncertaint­y.

While those countries like Poland and Taiwan that moved through the middle income trap swiftly, their economic growth was inclusive, jobs and salaries increased, inequality across income groups and provinces reduced, education levels increased and poverty declined drasticall­y.

Recipe for success

For a start it is important to get the public institutio­ns right —economic but also political—and guide reform with a shared vision. Also countries like Poland sustained its high growth with a performing democracy—one that supported a socially responsibl­e market economy. Such a vision facilitate­d remarkable policy continuity spanning 18 government­s since democratiz­ation. Therefore the creation and strengthen­ing the structures of the basic democratic institutio­ns at the local and national levels is critical. The support structures, helps to create a political consensus for deeper economic institutio­nal change and sustainabl­e public finances.

Then ensuring macroecono­mic stability is key to keep inflation and public debt under control. Integratin­g local markets into global markets help increase national competitiv­eness. We need foreign direct investment to enable our domestic firms to participat­e in internatio­nal value chains and exposed them to the internatio­nal markets, which will provide access to better inputs, capital goods, and technologi­cal transfers, good reforms and solid investment­s in human capital, which can result in large gains in educationa­l attainment and ensure broadbased access to quality education across all income groups and regions to pull people out of the poverty trap. Creating competitiv­e and open markets is required to provide business opportunit­ies for firms and jobs to increase business growth and also earnings. Their prosperity will generate demand for goods and services. Opening up to global capital intelligen­tly will give the economy a massive boost. The country needs to shift resources from low to high productivi­ty sectors for exports to make the transforma­tion.

Fresh spurt

As the President rightly pointed out on Independen­ce Day, the Sri Lankan economy needs a fresh spurt and needs to rise as a whole, not in parts only. Achieving and sustaining growth requires the mass mobilizati­on of financial as well as human capital. If not, large sections of the population will not see their lives improve and will be left behind.

Therefore, the quality of healthcare, education, affordable housing and skill developmen­t for the deprived masses is a must. In the interim, policymake­rs must not use the trap story as an excuse for poor short -term economic growth. The country should do all it can for a much needed upsurge in economic activity. Failure at this stage could leave Sri Lanka stagnant in a lower middle-income bracket, even as Asia strives to catch up with the West and overtake them. If this is to be an “Asian century”, despite all the challenges of poverty, trade barriers and disease we must surely stay in the reckoning.

 ??  ?? President addressing the nation
President addressing the nation
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