Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Businesses need confidence to survive through the current political unrest

- By Raj Moorthy

While the country is going through a dilemma of political unrest for over a month, heads of chambers are urging businesses to hold on to the situation and not to lose confidence or hope. Businesses have a very important role to play at times like this when the environmen­t seems to be very uncertain.

This emerged when the Sunday Times Business Club last week organised a timely discussion titled “Managing a Business during Turbulent Times” at the Kingsbury Colombo, the club’s host hotel.

National Chamber of Exporters President, Ramal Jasinghe, National Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka President, S u j e ewa Samaraweer­a and Takas. lk CEO, Lahiru Pathmalal were the panellists.

Mr. Samaraweer­a urged during the discussion that people and businesses have a major role to play at uncertain situations like today. “Hold on to the situation, be very cautious and don’t lose confidence, it’s a matter of three to four months of political struggle,” he said. Businesses should not get diverted to political discussion­s, go on the democratic path to find solutions to all the prob- lems. The political fraternity will understand this with time, he added.

He also mentioned that small and medium enterprise­s are suffering and most of them are closing down because they cannot sustain and there is no cash flow. The internatio­nal business Sri Lanka has been involved in, has been tremendous­ly affected.

Chambers have been working hard to bring foreign direct investment­s ( FDIs) all these years and it has all now come to a halt. The country will face many issues in bringing back the FDIs and it is on the brink of losing lots of opportunit­ies that it had created all these years, he noted.

Mr. Jasinghe stated that moving forward if the GSP+ concession­s are removed Sri Lanka will fall again into a middle income country. “We will have limited opportunit­ies in the EU whereas 65 per cent exports are subject to GSP+ concession today while 30 per cent of Sri Lankan exports are to the UK. We need to continue many dialogues with the EU for some form of free trade agreement.”

Sri Lanka must focus more on manufactur­ing new products, invest on research and developmen­t, improve the services sector, move into new markets, increase the technology sector and boost agricultur­e, he added.

From an e- commerce point of v i ew, Mr. Pathmalal mentioned that 20- 25 per cent of Sri Lanka’s GDP is on the retail sector. There have been challenges in the retail sector in Sri Lanka in the past and now it has hit an alltime high. In the next 6- 12 months the problem can only get worse if no ( face- saving) measures are taken, he noted.

He also stressed that even during the world financial crisis, Sri Lanka didn’t get affected this much. “The country’s Constituti­on is under question. We don’t want the people who brought this country into a disaster to find solutions for us,” he reiterated.

Mr. Samaraweer­a also stated, “Kids in their school curriculum need to be taught what qualities a good politician must have. The culture of the people must change. As citizens of this country we are part of this whole mess. Socially we have a responsibi­lity in these turbulent times.”

 ??  ?? Audience. Pix by Priyantha Wickramara­chchi
Audience. Pix by Priyantha Wickramara­chchi
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Sujeewa Samaraweer­a
Sujeewa Samaraweer­a
 ??  ?? Ramal Jasinghe
Ramal Jasinghe
 ??  ?? Lahiru Pathmalal
Lahiru Pathmalal
 ??  ??

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