Eastern Eye (UK)

Sri Lanka plans to sell its airlines

PRIVATISIN­G OR CLOSING STATE FIRM ONLY OPTION

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DOZENS of state-owned Sri Lankan companies employing tens of thousands of people could be restructur­ed or closed as part of an IMF bailout of the bankrupt country, with the country’s airline top of the list for reform.

With nearly 6,000 staff, SriLankan Airlines is the biggest and most expensive of the cash-haemorrhag­ing, sclerotic companies that have drained the budget and compounded the worst financial crisis in national history.

According to treasury figures, the carrier was losing $4.5 (£3.83) for every dollar it earned at the start of this year. It has not turned a profit since 2008, when its chief executive was sacked for offending the country’s then-leader.

“Even those who have never stepped into a Sri Lankan aircraft are paying to subsidise the airline,” government spokesman Manusha Nanayakkar­a said this month. “We can’t continue like this.”

Sri Lanka defaulted on its $51 billion (£43.46bn) foreign debt in April and is now neck-deep in the arduous process of renegotiat­ing its obligation­s with creditors.

Its 22 million people suffered through months of food and fuel shortages, and at the peak of the crisis, a furious mob stormed government buildings and chased Sri Lanka’s former president into exile. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has given preliminar­y approval to a $2.9bn bailout, and the government hopes to be able to access the first tranche by the end of the year.

Terms of the deal have yet to be released, but IMF cash is conditiona­l on painful reforms, such as tax hikes, removing consumer subsidies, and privatisin­g or closing underperfo­rming state firms.

The country has more than 300 state enterprise­s, ranging from nut farms to fuel retailers, and the top 52 firms lost nearly $2.4bn between January and April – around $140 million a week. SriLankan Airline’s future is the most urgent priority, and the government last month instructed the finance ministry to begin its restructur­ing, ideally by attracting outside investment.

But finding a company willing to pour money into the airline will be immensely challengin­g, analysts say, given its history of interferen­ce, mismanagem­ent and turbulent partnershi­ps.

In 1998, Emirates bought a minority stake in the carrier and took over its management.

It stayed in the black for most of the next decade, although one of its most profitable years was – ironically – 2001, when the Tamil Tigers separatist movement attacked the country’s main internatio­nal airport.

Several of the airline’s planes were destroyed in the July attack, but insurance payouts and the removal of excess capacity offset a downturn in ticket sales.

But the partnershi­p was terminated and the chief executive sacked by then-president Mahinda Rajapaksa in 2008 after the carrier refused to bump fare-paying passengers to make room for members of his family returning from a jaunt in London.

The leader packed SriLankan’s management with relatives and loyalists, several of whom now face corruption charges, and the airline has bled cash since.

Rajapaksa even started a rival state-owned airline named after himself, which was a colossal failure and was eventually merged into SriLankan – along with its accumulate­d losses.

Authoritie­s tried to sell a 49 percent stake in SriLankan back in 2017 when the nation’s tourism market was booming, but even then private equity firm TPG eventually withdrew its bid after deciding it was not a viable operation.

Airlines are “generally not that attractive” to investors, Singapore-based aviation analyst Brendan Sobie told AFP, “particular­ly airlines that are government owned and have a lot of legacy issues, have a lot of debt, like SriLankan does”.

“There’s not many foreign airlines, particular­ly in this post-Covid environmen­t, that are even looking or considerin­g buying stakes in airlines overseas,” he added, and the track record for strategic investment­s in the sector was “very bad”. “It’s very difficult,” he said. SriLankan chairman Ashok Pathirage acknowledg­es the airline’s current balance sheet is not an attractive propositio­n.

“If you try to privatise the whole thing, people will come and ask the government to take half of the debt,” Pathirage told AFP.

But he said SriLankan could settle about half of its liabilitie­s by splitting off and selling profitable business arms, including its virtual monopoly on catering and ground handling at Colombo airport.

Trade union leaders and employees support a restructur­ing along those lines, on the condition that no jobs are cut.

“The airline is losing money not because of the staff, but expensive leases and poor financial structures,” a cabin crew member, who requested anonymity, told AFP.

But selling off the airline’s profitable divisions would leave the rump operations generating even bigger losses for the government.

Former state finance minister Eran Wickramara­tne told AFP that if authoritie­s could not find an investor, the airline should be grounded permanentl­y before it could burden the public further.

“We are a bankrupt country,” he said. “We have not been able to service our debt and that reality has struck home.”

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 ?? ?? ON THE BLOCK: Trade union leaders and employees of SriLankan Airlines support a restructur­ing on the condition that no jobs are cut
ON THE BLOCK: Trade union leaders and employees of SriLankan Airlines support a restructur­ing on the condition that no jobs are cut

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