Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SL plagued with a lame duck government, says former CB deputy governor

- By Raj Moorthy

The Sri Lankan government at present is made up of “birds - ostrich, lame duck and icarus while seeking to take a flamingo flight without addressing its own weaknesses”, says W.A Wijewarden­a, former deputy governor of the Central Bank.

Addressing a gathering of experts in the logistics sector on ‘Sri Lanka’s competitiv­eness in the region – the next Asian tiger in the making or do we remain a small miracle?’ organised by the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport recently at the National Chamber of Commerce in Sri Lanka, Mr. Wijewarden­a made this comment.

He said, “The government acts like an ostrich because it’s defending wrong government action tooth and nail when they are crystal clear to the rest of the world. Incapacita­ted government through its own in-fights, lack of consensus, internal communicat­ion and clear cut direction makes it a lame duck government. It behaves as an icarus government by burning its own fingers doing everything in the wrong way.”

Mr. Wijewarden­a stated that Sri Lanka needs to make four quantum leaps within a short period moving out from the typical rural agro-based society to the fourth industrial revolution.

Any economy in the world has to go through competitiv­eness, he stressed. “Sri Lanka’s future prosperity depends on its economic integratio­n to the external world which involves the promotion of export of goods and services.” The country is also faced with the challenge of beating the middle income country trap and competitiv­e superiorit­y as its key facilitato­r, he added.

Citing some figures from the 2016 Central Bank Annual Report, he stated that it’s not a very happy story for the country. The real economic growth, the per capita income and the overall trade deficit have decreased in 2016 than 2015 while the GDP, domestic savings investment gap, current account balance and government debt have increased in 2016 against 2015, noted Mr. Wijewarden­a. He also stressed that the total foreign reserves and the foreign reserves have decreased rapidly till April 2017 while the dollar exchange rate has increased.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe has projected an economic growth of 7 per cent per annum while the GDP is to increase by eight times by 2045 enabling Sri Lanka to become a rich country, he added.

Mr. Wijewarden­a, elaboratin­g on the economic reforms mentioned that the economic system has to be deregulate­d making it easy for the private sector to do business, modernise revenue generating agencies of the government and the banking sector to maintain stability without being a burden on taxpayers. “Make private sector move the country forward by having consistent and transparen­t polices and making the tax system simple, predictabl­e and universal,” he added.

Introduce measures to improve productivi­ty and efficiency using both human and physical capital through introducti­on of technology, developmen­t of relevant human capital, encourage research, developmen­t and applicatio­n and emulate and adapt global best practices, he stated.

Mr. Wijewarden­a noted that state owned enterprise­s are loss-making whereas the public sector has to be made efficient. “There is no communicat­ion by the government to the public as to why policies are implemente­d,” he stressed.

Relevant education for young upcoming millennial matters for eco- nomic growth, noted Mr. Wijewarden­a while stating that the culture of people’s lifestyle has to change with new technology and innovation that are taking place around the world. Private universiti­es should be given equal rights and opportunit­ies like state-owned universiti­es, he added.

For Sri Lanka to look at a way forward, take a stock of the state of human capital developmen­t and the quality of the facilitati­ng logistical services. Get into an economic policy capsule with participat­ion of politician­s, bureaucrat­s, academia and civil society organisati­ons, map out strategy for developing the talent pool of the country needed by 2025, 2035 and 2045. Sign off the strategy with time bound key performanc­e indices to monitor progress, rectify deviations and plan out for emerging developmen­ts, he stated.

Any economy in the world has to go through competitiv­eness, he stressed. “Sri Lanka’s future prosperity depends on its economic integratio­n to the external world which involves the promotion of export of goods and services.” The country is also faced with the challenge of beating the middle income country trap and competitiv­e superiorit­y as its key facilitato­r, he added.

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