Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Implicatio­ns of economic growth performanc­e in 2014

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Last year's economic growth of 7.4 per cent, as disclosed in the Central Bank Annual Report for 2014, is a continuati­on of the economic growth trend averaging 7.4 per cent in the last five years (2010 to 2014). It is also a continuati­on of the pattern of developmen­t in recent years. The sources of growth displayed weaknesses and serious fundamenta­l fiscal and trade imbalances. Foreign indebtedne­ss continued to increase to reach a new high. Economic growth

Economic growth in 2014 was the highest in the last three years (2012-14) when the average annual economic growth was 7 per cent. It was slightly higher than the 7.2 per cent achieved in 2013.

The high economic growth of recent years was fuelled by large investment­s in infrastruc­ture financed mostly by foreign borrowing. Although such investment generates GDP growth, the long-term benefits of such investment in infrastruc­ture are too little in comparison with their costs. Consequent­ly such growth creates serious fundamenta­l weaknesses in the economy. Growth in sub sectors

The sub sectors of the economy that grew were constructi­on, import trade, public services (salaries) and services such as communicat­ions, banking and insurance. The growth in some of these is a positive developmen­t, but the growth in others, such as in constructi­on, public services and trade related services are of lesser economic significan­ce.

The growth in constructi­on by 20.2 percent contribute­d 23.8 percent to the 7.4 percent growth. Factory industry that grew by 8 per cent last year owing to a buoyant export market contribute­d 8.5 per cent while agricultur­e grew by only 0.3 percent owing to bad weather conditions affecting most crops in 2014.

The services sector that grew at 6.5 per cent, slightly higher than the 6.4 per cent growth of 2013, accounted for 57.6 per cent of GDP. Services had both positive features as well as less beneficial contributi­ons, such as growth in internal and export trade related services and excessive expansion of public services.

Growth was excessivel­y reliant on infrastruc­ture investment rather than on raising productivi­ty for sustainabl­e growth. Economic growth generated by large foreign-funded infrastruc­ture investment with inadequate returns from such investment increases foreign indebtedne­ss and weakens macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls. Fundamenta­l weaknesses

Three key weaknesses in the economy in recent years are the fiscal imbalance, the large trade deficit and the massive foreign debt. These weaknesses are detrimenta­l to economic growth in the long run.

The fiscal deficit last year at 6 per cent of GDP was higher than the 5.9 per cent of 2013 and much higher than the targeted 5.2 per cent that the government repeatedly said it would achieve. The main reason for the increased deficit was a decline in government revenue to 12.2 per cent of GDP in 2014 compared to 13.1 per cent in 2013. This declining trend in revenue is a fundamenta­l weakness.

The fiscal imbalance must be reduced by taxation reforms that increase government revenue to about 18-20 per cent of GDP. While adopting a progressiv­e tax struc-

ture that does not discourage investment, public expenditur­e must be properly prioritise­d and prudently expended by cutting ostentatio­us exorbitant wasteful expenditur­e and at the same time expending more resources on priority areas like education, health, research and beneficial infrastruc­ture developmen­t. The Government has made this shift in public expenditur­e, but measures to increase revenue have to be put in place. Debt

The rising public debt is a serious concern as it is 75 per cent of GDP and debt servicing costs absorbed 90 per cent of revenue. The foreign debt that increased from US$ 39.9 billion in 2013 to US$ 43.0 billion in 2014 is especially burdensome. The foreign debt as a percentage of GDP, however, decreased from 59.4 per cent in 2013 to 57.4 per cent in 2014 owing to the increase in GDP exceeding the increase in debt. There was also an improvemen­t in the debt servicing cost of the foreign debt that absorbed 23.4 per cent of export earnings in 2013 decreasing to 20.2 per cent owing to a reduction in the repayment of principal and increased export earnings.

Despite these improvemen­ts, foreign debt that is more than one half of GDP absorbed one fifth of export earnings. It is a burden that must be reduced by restraint in borrowing and increasing the balance of payments surplus by reining in imports and expanding exports. Trade deficit

Despite a high rate of economic growth of 7.4 per cent and export growth of 7.1 per cent over that of last year, the trade deficit increased by 9 per cent from US$ 7.6 billion to US$ 8.3 billion. The large infrastruc­ture investment that has high import content is an important reason for this dent in the trade balance.

It is vital to reduce the trade deficit to strengthen the external finances by generating a higher balance of payments surplus that could be used to reduce the county's foreign debt whose servicing costs are detrimenta­l to long term economic growth. Economic imperative­s

The Central Bank Annual Report for 2014 has emphasised the need for a medium-term strategy for economic developmen­t. The economic imperative­s for meeting the economic challenges that lie ahead are demanding. "The Government faces the enormous task of articulati­ng a coherent medium-term policy framework, which enhances positive effects, while addressing possible shortcomin­gs of previously announced policies as well as the challenges ahead."

Furthermor­e, "Some of these challenges are, the urgent need to address the continued decline in government revenue as a percentage of GDP in order to achieve a better fiscal balance; increasing productivi­ty of all sectors of the economy, including the public sector; raising resources required for sustained growth through non debt creating sources, in particular, foreign direct investment­s (FDI); developing appropriat­e pricing policies for public utilities; better identifica­tion of beneficiar­ies in implementi­ng social safety nets and subsidy programmes; improving the equity and quality of health and education service provision; addressing the issue of public transporta­tion; continuing physical infrastruc­ture developmen­t on a sustainabl­e basis; formulatin­g policies to address the challenge of aging population including improving labour productivi­ty and promoting the developmen­t of super annuation and insurance products; and, improving the doing business environmen­t and policy predictabi­lity."

The tasks are enormous and require political stability, leadership, political courage, a longer term perspectiv­e and a strong resolution to carry out reforms. Only a stable government committed to achieving sustainabl­e high economic growth can ensure such

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