Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

LEVERAGING ON AGRI-FOOD SECTOR FOR SL’S ECONOMIC REVIVAL As a protective measure, Sri Lanka should use the crisis-driven opportunit­y to mitigate the constraint­s on domestic availabili­ty wherever applicable

- Jeevika Weerahewa and Devesh Roy

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy of Sri Lanka like anywhere else in the world will be complex to predict in terms of magnitude, but directions are predictabl­e. Being a trade dependent island nation, Sri Lanka would likely suffer from the expected recession in addition to the disruption­s in global and domestic supply chains. Notwithsta­nding these effects, our research shows that the overall impacts on agri-food supply chains in Sri Lanka may not be the slayer that one would expect it to be, barring the prolonged disruption­s and adverse policy stances in other countries. Every crisis invariably nests an opportunit­y. As the rebuilding and revival of the economy eventuates, this article proposes three pivotal heads of interventi­ons to make capital of the agri-food chains to shepherd the revival of the Sri Lankan economy post COVID-19 i.e. after the storm.

1. TARGET INCREASED EXPORT EARNINGS

In 2008 food price crisis, Cambodia was a sole torch bearer of trade openness (not impeding exports of rice) amid the reign of soaring prices. It experience­d very significan­t export earnings. The nature of crisis is different now, but human and policy tendencies would likely remain the same i.e. to look inward. With import substituti­on likely in vogue it is important to appeal to the powerful idea in trade economics i.e. Lerner Symmetry theorem; an import tax is an export tax. Taking this crisis as an opportunit­y, Sri Lanka should be redoubling efforts to increase exports sans COVID-19. In the height of its emergency, the continuanc­e of agri-supply chains including exports engenders hope on agricultur­e leading from the front in revival. Towards this the following steps can be suggested.

(i) Remove restrictio­ns on raw material and input imports. With raw materials taxed, the effective protection to the domestic producers falls. One of the principal reasons because of which Bangladesh now has the most mechanized agricultur­e in South Asia is the liberal policies on agricultur­e machinery. Indeed, Sri Lanka too has policies to giving exemption from Customs duty, import cess and VAT to selected agricultur­al equipment and machinery. However, the eligibilit­y verificati­on process is cumbersome and highly time consuming limiting the uptake. The recovery drive after COVID-19 offers a great opportunit­y for improving ease of business that would make availing these concession­s easier.

(ii) Conditiona­l on available fiscal space, provide tax concession or compensati­on with a predetermi­ned tenure and targeting as temporary stimulus to export industries.

(iii) Post COVID-19, internatio­nal trade is likely to be different with inherent tendencies towards erecting barriers. To confront the new reality, Sri Lanka should proactivel­y and preemptive­ly try to strengthen trade links. It should strive for the extensive margin i.e. new products, new markets, new varieties, and prices. History is the proof that all goodly expansion of trade and its resilience have been achieved through extensive margin adjustment­s, like China, South Korea, or Chile or even in coping with sanctions-ridden Myanmar. In accessing expansion on the extensive margin, new exporters comprising Small and Medium Enterprise­s (SMES) will play an important role. Here again, there is a need and opportunit­y for ease of doing business. The three-tiered registrati­on process involving Export Developmen­t Board (EDB), Internal Revenue Department (IRD) and Sri Lanka Customs (SLC) has been onerous and introduces fixed costs disadvanta­ging SMES. The ease of doing business that determine time and cost to trade need to be taken up on a priority basis.

2. RATIONALIZ­E PUBLIC EXPENDITUR­E IN AGRICULTUR­E VALUE CHAINS

With COVID-19, the thin line between crisis response and structural change often gets blurred. Sri Lanka has gainfully been the exception in South Asia in terms of openness and being less interventi­onist in food markets. Towards this, interventi­on during crisis involving procuremen­t and involvemen­t of state agencies could now be soft-pedaled as soon as possible. In the rebuilding period, all government­s would face resource constraint­s, the pre-existing free distributi­on of fertilizer­s might need to be reweighed in favor of the erstwhile cash grant scheme. On the domestic market side, there is a dawn of a rationale for targeting food subsidies. A generalize­d apportionm­ent through maximum retail prices of rice, dhall and canned fish is not the most costeffect­ive way of social protection, while Sri Lanka recaptures the high-income growth trajectory after the post 2009 anatomic break. While targeting, revisions in the list of beneficiar­ies for Samurdhi programme and tapering off distributi­on of subsidized seeds and planting material for homegarden­ing projects need considerat­ion. In the nutrition programmes there is a recognized need for better targeting to create the fiscal space, this might be the moment to target only the neediest pregnant women. There should be move to identify the new COVID-19 induced vulnerable (urban poor, recipients of school meal programme, people suffering from NCDS, factory workers, communitie­s in remote locations) and make them eligible to receive relief package.

3. INNOVATION­S IN SUPPLY CHAIN COMPRESSIO­N

It is possible that imports might be constraine­d for some time. As a protective measure, Sri Lanka should use the crisis driven opportunit­y to mitigate the constraint­s on domestic availabili­ty wherever applicable. There should be a drive to ensure raw materials (seeds, fertilizer­s, pesticides, packaging materials etc.) to commence local production and processing. COVID-19 also offers a great opportunit­y to foster some long overdue structural changes in agricultur­e like relaxing restrictio­ns on cultivatio­n of crops other than paddy in lowlands. From the value chain perspectiv­e, focal areas would be investment on cold storage facilities and revitalizi­ng the extension service. To make the markets competitiv­e, market informatio­n system based on government agencies should be widely available. COVID-19 also brought forth many elements of direct sales to the consumers. As the recovery takes place there is a basis to keep the momentum, incentiviz­e firms which enter on-line marketing tools in food distributi­on. also brings to the forefront the importance attributes like food safety, bio-security, and animal health in agricultur­al value chains. Hence as a path to recovery, government should provide incentives to connect farmers to markets, engage in value addition and marketing while creating a reward system for healthy agricultur­al practices.

The authors - Jeevika Weerahewa of the University of Peradeniya and Devesh Roy of the Internatio­nal

Food Policy Research Institute

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