Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

DO POLITICIAN­S NEED TO HAVE DEGREES?

- By Ranga Jayasuriya Follow @Rangajayas­uriya

LCompariso­ns between Sri Lanka and Singapore are also a dime a dozen, in part because, Lee Kuan Yew was said to be inspired by Sri Lanka’s early success

Constituen­cies in competitiv­e electoral democracie­s do not necessaril­y prioritize the intellectu­al calibre of the candidates when they pick their MPS

ast week as Sri Lanka celebrated the 74th anniversar­y of its independen­ce, there happened to be a lumbering amount of analysis as to what went wrong in our independen­t history. Much of that discourse was saddled with a hefty sense of disappoint­ment, which was understand­able. But, some of the most hackneyed whining was overly simplistic; comparison­s were cherry-picked, and all of that generally lead to overly gloomy analysis.

For instance, whenever a public speaker is gauging our post-independen­ce performanc­e, the general tendency is to draw a comparison against a handful of break out nations of the 20th century:

Singapore, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, etc. That is akin to comparing an average student with a Mensa certified IQ genius. Those few nations are an exception to the norm and they managed to exploit certain unique geopolitic­al, historical and structural advantages during their high growth years. In comparison, the vast majority of newly independen­t nations in Asia, Africa, and Latin America had not done any better than Sri Lanka. Probably, Sri Lanka could still claim itself to be a success story of a welfare state, that within its economic means had managed to provide free health care and education for all of its people.

Comparison­s between Sri Lanka and

Singapore are also a dime a dozen, in part because, Lee Kuan Yew was said to be inspired by Sri Lanka’s early success. So, according to opinion-makers of a certain school of thought, the primary handicap in Sri Lanka was race relations.

If Sri Lanka treated all its communitie­s the way Singapore does, we would have become a paradise by now, they observe authoritat­ively.

But, in truth, the race relations in Singapore are highly regulated; microscopi­c of Confuciani­st belief in the social hierarchy where everyone has their assigned place in society and they ought to keep on to it. Alongside a normative ethnic representa­tion in the state and hefty retributio­n cost for upsetting the status quo, that premise could be expanded to regulate race relations. A similar arrangemen­t does exist in another Tiger economy, Malaysia, where politics is by default, the prerogativ­e of ethnic Malays.

Probably, in such a status quo, passing the

Vaddukkoda­i Resolution would have been tantamount to passing one’s death sentence, and in that sense, regulated race relations like in Singapore or Malaysia might have saved the country from three decades of the nihilistic secessioni­st campaign. But, that would not necessaril­y have made a happy society.

Then, there is another school of thought that we have repeatedly elected incompeten­t and uneducated fools, who are not fit to lead the nation. A social media post that made rounds last week poked fun at the educationa­l qualificat­ions of the holders of political office in Singapore and Sri Lanka. Of course, the Cabinet Ministers of Singapore, most of whom hold post-graduate degrees from top tier global universiti­es and have decades of profession­al experience are exceptiona­lly qualified. Whereas the majority of our fellows are no better than an average village headman. However, our politician­s are elected through competitiv­e elections - and not from the ones that gerrymande­red to make sure the ruling party wins.

Constituen­cies in competitiv­e electoral democracie­s do not necessaril­y prioritize the intellectu­al calibre of the candidates when they pick their MPS. Whereas Communist China’s Politburo Standing Committee, the innermost sanctum of the political power of the Chinese state, is an assemble of probably the most technocrat­ic leaders.

Sri Lankan politics is not bereft of the intelligen­tsia, probably in terms of his academic credential­s, G.L. Peiris is happened to be a highly acclaimed academic, but as a politician, he is a disgrace. Then, there there were truly gifted gentlemen, Lalith, Gamini, Kadirgamar, etc. But, what they have delivered pales in comparison to their peers across the world. True that they all had their lives cut short by violence, however, whether they would have contrasted had they lived longer is guesswork.

Perhaps, none of the above is the primary

constraint in Sri Lanka’s post-colonial experience. The deciding factor is the structure and the domestic organizati­onal arrangemen­ts. As Alexis de Tocquevill­e observed in his book, ‘Democracy in America’, two centuries ago, state’s domestic organizati­onal configurat­ions, along with their overall patterns of activity, affect political culture; and encourage and give effect to specific kinds of group formation and collective political actions, while also precluding certain other behaviours. He was referring to contrastin­g trajectori­es of French and American revolution­s, and as to how America managed to foster democracy and the French Revolution failed to do that.

The Tiger economies that leapfrogge­d in economic growth managed to do so by taming the structure. There again, none of them was democracie­s; they left little room for dissent and divergence.

That was not how it worked in Sri Lanka, then and now. This country has been a chaotic, boisterous and, though not perfect, functionin­g democracy. Also, its electorate has been an entitled lot, that changed government­s at almost every election from the independen­ce to up until 1977. Effectivel­y, this domestic structure inhibited the state, or the politician­s and bureaucrac­y, who speak and act on behalf of the state. It discourage­d the leaders from adopting cohesive long-term policies. Good economic policies are not usually the type that wins elections. As a result, politician­s appealed to their constituen­cy through short-term populist policies, that could get them re-elected. As a result of this lopsided relationsh­ip, the Sri Lankan state evolved to be a reactive one, rather than being a proactive one. That may also explain why it inflamed three insurgenci­es within a couple of decades. The failure of economic reforms is also a case in point.

This lopsided social contract had not changed much, because, the structure has not evolved qualitativ­ely and most outspoken voices who could sway public opinion are still parroting discarded statistic economic models and crying blue murder at every foreign investment.

Politician­s, rather than leading the nation, are led by public impulses. If Sri Lanka had under-performed, it is because of its people.

 ?? ?? The Cabinet Ministers of Singapore, most of whom hold post-graduate degrees from top tier global universiti­es and have decades of profession­al experience are exceptiona­lly qualified.
The Cabinet Ministers of Singapore, most of whom hold post-graduate degrees from top tier global universiti­es and have decades of profession­al experience are exceptiona­lly qualified.
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