A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, May 29, 2016
Friday Forum Calls For Domestic Reforms, Says International Community Goodwill Alone Will Not Help Economy

May 27, 2016
The Friday Forum has
underscored that no amount of goodwill on the part of the international
community will help Sri Lanka’s economy without discipline and the
domestic will to reform.
The Forum, comprising of a group dedicated to democracy, good
governance, human rights and rule of law said that it recognizes the
extremely difficult economic policy choices that our society and
government have to make in the present circumstances.
“These
circumstances include total expenditure in excess of incomes earned in
the economy requiring borrowing abroad year after year; a continued
failure to raise government revenue adequate to meet government
expenditure; a rampant rise in government expenditure pushed by
competitive populist measures espoused by the main political parties at
elections; the consequent recourse by government to debt financing,
borrowing in both domestic and foreign markets to pay for rising
expenditure and servicing accumulated debt of government absorbing a
large and rising proportion of government receipts; and denying
resources to undertake both rising current expenditure and to continue
with current investment projects, leave aside new investments. The rupee
cost of servicing foreign debt rises with the devaluation of the rupee
and worsens domestic public finance problems,” the Forum said in a
statement released on Thursday.
The international economic conditions now and in the near years not
holding prospects of rapid growth in the principal economies of the
world as in the previous decade or so, to enable the Sri Lanka economy
to grow faster pulled by export demand. “It is probable that interest
rates in world capital markets may rise after several years of very
cheap money and that rise will make refinancing of government foreign
debt far more expensive. Remittances from earnings overseas by Sri Lanka
nationals did not rise in 2015 and that may worsen the problem in the
balance of international payments.
Slow growth in the economy enforced by these circumstances will reduce
the increase in living standards and cut own growth in employment
opportunities. It is imperative that whatever mix of policies is chosen,
that mix includes measures to minimize adverse effects on those least
able to bear them. To make an understatement, these are unpleasant
situations for any government to handle,” the statement said.
According to the Friday Forum, Sri Lanka has a small number of options
to choose from, which are however not easy to implement. “The
temporarily pleasant choice is to go on regardless and finance increased
government expenditure by printing money and extending credit to the
private sector on easy terms to expand private expenditure in the hope
of growing out of economic difficulties. It is as temporarily pleasant
as it is in the longer run impracticable. Boosting domestic demand in
that manner will soon create a crisis in international payments, raise
domestic prices rapidly, depreciate the rupee against all currencies and
lead to other nasty consequences, which have the potential to
destabilize society, both economically and politically,” the statement
signed by Dr. G. Usvatte- Aratchi and Prof. Savitri Goonesekera said.
The other choices are likely to cause hardship in the short term but may
bring back stability to the economy and given wise policies to a long
term growth path. Hardship will come because easing the severity of
current crises in the economy will require restraining the growth of
total domestic demand bringing down rates of growth, with little
expansion in export demand. “Government will need to review seriously
incentive structures and institute fundamental reforms in government
finance and administration,” the statement said.
The Forum noted that the Central Bank has the responsibility to bring
the financial system to sound health. The severity of hardships can be
mitigated, but by no means eliminated, with the help of the
international community whose good will to the people of Sri Lanka has
been high since January 2015. “However, no amount of goodwill on the
part of the international community will help the economy without
discipline and the domestic will to reform,” the group said.
“Further there is the possibility of direct controls on imports and
capital movements. We are all too familiar with the consequences of
these controls from experience in the 1970s. Discretion to allocate
resources in the hands of politicians and bureaucrats will corrupt
whatever is left of a working government machinery. In so doing we also
would infringe international agreements which we had entered into. All
assistance from intergovernmental financial institutes will come under
serious questioning. Private net capital inflows would most likely
dwindle at best to a trickle,” the statement said.
