Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

UK eclipses China to become top direct investor in Sri Lanka

„UK accounts for 24% of total FDI in Jan.-sept. 2020 period „China accounts for only 12% of total FDI of US $ 548mn

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While almost everyone was immersed in the pandemic, the United Kingdom (UK) stumped China to become the top investor in Sri Lanka in 2020.

Based on the data by the Board of Investment (BOI), the agency tasked with promoting the country for longterm job-creating investment­s, the UK accounted for the lion’s share of total foreign direct investment (FDI) to Sri Lanka in 2020, accounting for 24 percent.

FDI to Sri Lanka slumped in 2020, as cross-border investment­s took a battering, due to the widespread disruption­s to businesses caused by the pandemic.

As a result, Sri Lanka reported US $ 548 million in total FDI in the nine months to September 2020, compared to US $ 793 million in the same period in 2019, the latest available data on direct investment­s by the Central Bank showed.

British-born financier and a member of Rothschild family, Nathaniel Rothschild, took a visit to Sri Lanka in January this year to explore the country’s suitabilit­y as a manufactur­ing base for an electronic­s venture.

China, which led the bilateral lenders in 2020, however retreated to the second place, accounting for only 12 percent of total FDI to Sri Lanka in 2020.

China has been heavily criticised for pouring loans into developing countries like Sri Lanka on mega infrastruc­ture projects until they reach a point of no return in terms of repayment, eventually compelling those countries to convert such loans into equity, where China will effectivel­y become owners of those national assets.

This scenario is popularly known as ‘China’s debt-trap diplomacy’, which the Chinese authoritie­s vehemently deny.

Sri Lanka fell into this trap when it had to forgo a port built in Hambantota, although much of it was due to bad diplomacy by the government of that day. Meanwhile, India, Hong Kong and Singapore, respective­ly held the third, fourth and fifth spots as direct investors in Sri Lanka in 2020, with 11 percent and 8 percent each for the latter two. Out of the total direct investment­s received in the nine months to September, the manufactur­ing sector accounted for US $ 157 million or Rs.30 billion in fresh investment­s. This is a significan­t pivot in investment flows from the non-tradable sector to the tradable sector, due to the conscious efforts by the policymake­rs to rebuild Sri Lanka’s industrial base. Servicesor­iented ventures attracted US $ 86 million in fresh investment­s in the same period in 2020. Infrastruc­ture attracted the largest amount of FDI of US $ 311 million during the nine months, triggered by the port-related developmen­ts that are ongoing.

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