Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Pitfalls of Sri Lanka’s remittance economy

- BY Matt Withers (Courtesy East Asia Forum) (Matt Withers is a Research Fellow at the Department of Sociology, Macquarie University)

The post-millennium surge in global remittance­s — amounting to a net transfer of US$ 689 billion to the global south in 2019 has courted significan­t policy attention around prospects for ‘migration-developmen­t’.

The World Bank and the Migration Policy Institute have heralded temporary labour migration as a ‘triple win’: a win for migrant workers, for the countries they hail from and for the countries they work in, with remittance­s positioned as the pivotal boon for migrant households and countries of origin.

The argument assumes that remittance­s allow poor households to overcome poverty and make investment­s while providing much needed foreign exchange earnings at a macroecono­mic level.

But the weight of evidence suggests that the picture might not so rosy, particular­ly for ‘remittance economies’ that have become dependent on a strategy of migration instead of developmen­t.

Reliance on temporary labour migration

Sri Lanka is one such remittance economy that has become increasing­ly reliant on temporary labour migration. The last headcount conducted in 2011 showed that Sri Lanka’s temporary migrant workers numbered over two million, equivalent to roughly a tenth of the country’s total population and a quarter of the local workforce at that time.

Combined remittance­s amounted to US$7.16 billion in 2018, approximat­ely 8.25 per cent of GDP and equivalent to 63 per cent of all goods exports. Remittance­s provide a larger share of foreign exchange earnings than the country’s three largest export industries combined.

The work itself typically entails long hours, hard labour, low wages and few rights. Migration of this kind is a costly gambit both financiall­y and interperso­nally. Prospectiv­e workers must pay substantia­l upfront recruitmen­t fees to arrange their foreign employment, often necessitat­ing usurious loans from local moneylende­rs. Under the notorious kafala system their visas are tied to a single employer who can delay or withhold payments with relative impunity given the dearth of legal recourse for aggrieved workers.

Even if these financial risks are weathered, multiple three-year stints are often required to amass meaningful savings, entailing decades of separation from family and community. As in the Philippine­s, the government of Sri Lanka has labelled these workers ‘migrant heroes’ to celebrate their sacrifice as agents of developmen­t for kin and country despite falling considerab­ly short of sustainabl­e developmen­t outcomes.

Interviews with returned migrant workers in Sri Lanka indicate that migration is primarily a subsistenc­e livelihood and that remaining remittance­s are rarely spent on business activities. Instead they are used to construct housing, for education and healthcare or to purchase consumer durables and jewellery.

Those who do start businesses typically pursue self-employment — opening a corner shop or operating a taxi — that substitute for the availabili­ty of a job rather than involving expansion or reinvestme­nt, ideas conjured up by notions of ‘migrant entreprene­urship’.

Remittance spillovers to local communitie­s are also minimal beyond the constructi­on sector, with demand instead routed toward the urban economy and imported goods.

At the macroecono­mic scale, total foreign exchange receipts of these transfers help to maintain currency stability amid a persistent trade deficit.

Maintainin­g a strong rupee has certain advantages: it helps finance imports and repay external debt accrued through developmen­tal loans. Yet, the Dutch disease effects of remittance­s place additional constraint­s on how these developmen­tal loans are spent. Sri Lanka’s already anaemic export sector has collapsed thanks to increasing remittance inflows — dwindling from 35 per cent of GDP in 2000 to just 13 per cent in 2017 — with investment moving from the tradeable to the non-tradeable sector.

Pork barrel infrastruc­tural projects

Hamstrung by an overvalued currency, government spending has not been earmarked for industrial­isation or export diversific­ation which are both central to Sri Lanka’s developmen­tal roadmap. Spending has instead been used to finance a variety of pork barrel infrastruc­tural projects built with Chinese loans and labour including a loss-operating port and the world’s emptiest internatio­nal airport.

Here, migration not only acts as a ‘release valve’ for local unemployme­nt and latent discontent but indirectly finances a vision of developmen­t that is manifestly non-inclusive.

Remittance­s are not yielding sustainabl­e developmen­t outcomes for households or the national economy but fostering a deepening reliance on a volatile and extraneous source of foreign capital. Sri Lanka ultimately has three levers with which to address its relationsh­ip with temporary labour migration: by deregulati­ng, delimiting or diversifyi­ng.

Deregulati­on has been State policy since 1977 and has overseen bourgeonin­g foreign employment leading to the present impasse.

Delimitati­on has been explored since 2013 but only insofar as imposing patriarcha­l restrictio­ns on the mobility rights of women with young children — a policy that has been widely condemned for being both discrimina­tory and ineffectiv­e.

Diversifyi­ng away from migration and investing in local industries requires a jarring break from the path dependency of the remittance economy.

The ever-increasing remittance­s needed to maintain the currency and repay existing loan obligation­s means that local employment generation threatens to kill the proverbial cash cow. Yet it is perhaps the only option that offers hope for having the choice not to migrate and still make ends meet.

DIVERSIFYI­NG AWAY FROM MIGRATION AND INVESTING IN LOCAL INDUSTRIES REQUIRES A JARRING BREAK FROM THE PATH DEPENDENCY OF THE REMITTANCE ECONOMY

DEREGULATI­ON HAS BEEN STATE POLICY SINCE 1977 AND HAS OVERSEEN BOURGEONIN­G FOREIGN EMPLOYMENT LEADING TO THE PRESENT IMPASSE

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