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
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 17, 2017
SRI LANKA: PARADISE THREATENED; 11.1% GDP CONTRIBUTION BY TOURISM
Photo credit: Newsin.Asia.
Over the weekend I was honoured to listen to my teacher from Harvard,
Professor Matt Andrew’s lecture to the Masters in tourism students of
Colombo University. He voiced that if not for the tourism industry Sri
Lanka would have faced a serious financial crisis and he emphasised the
importance of this industry for the future of Sri Lanka. This is so true
given that exports and FDIs have not performed as per expectations in
the last two years.
Professor Andrews went on to explain how way back in 2009 the industry
was registering $ 50 odd per visitor with the total earnings at just $
500 million. Today, this industry with or without strong marketing is
poised to deliver a $ 4 billion and per visit earnings of $ 200 million,
which is a commendable performance by the sector in the backdrop of
negative performances in export earnings and Foreign Direct Investments.
A point to note is that the global pool of exports and FDIs are very
large but Sri Lanka has failed to attract them even with all the
positivity the current Government has created globally. It’s something
we need further research on to understand the cause.
11.1% of GDP
If we do a deep dive, Sri Lanka has registered 11.1% of GDP contribution
from tourism to the national economy as at 2014 with the world average
being at 9.8% whilst the Asia Pacific performance is at 9.2%. The
industry employs 135,930 people and indirectly 183,506 as at 2015 whilst
it can become 25% of GDP, which is the sheer power of this industry in
the country but sadly we see a gap in policy for making this interesting
industry really unleash its true potential.
Whilst the numbers can be strong, from a qualitative point the tourism
industry has the potential to correct the regional inequality and hence
improve the overall quality of life which many are wondering why
policymakers are not understanding.
What policymakers need to understand is that real estate might be a
driver of the economy today but the reality is that it is not a tradable
commodity unless someone moves the apartment purchased for tourism or
we call it service apartments as a concept. Hence it’s time that Sri
Lanka looks at the future and moves to implementation of policy rather
than being wrapped up in the political economy that is at play, with
many questioning the alleged corruption in the public sector and the
ethos of the Yahapalanaya Government.
What is going wrong?
It’s time that Sri Lanka does a deep dive and understand what is ailing
this country. We have a nonmarketable balance sheet. The 85 billion
dollar economy has debt of around 75% of the economy; 95% of the
earnings are used to pay the loans it has taken. The competitiveness of
the country has slipped from the 90s to 113 in the last year even though
we had strong perception on 8 January 2015 that Sri Lanka would be a
tiger nation in the years to come.
The share of voice of the Central Bank bond scandal has
reached a proportion that even a child of 10 years is talking about the
issue despite not knowing what it means. Many of us from the private
sector who agreed to serve the public sector for two years have moved
back to the private sector as we were being used to legitimise
corruption by the politicians in power that we did not give into.
I have personally agreed not to hold office in the public sector as the
helm of the Government are not interested in retaining talent or
correcting the system given the political economy at play. To be honest I
emphasise with them. But the reality is that if Sri Lanka proceeds in
this manner, GDP growth will come down to 3% by the end of the year is
the view of professional analyst. The question is, where do we go from
here?
Cry of the private sector
In this background, the marketing budget of the pivotal growth industry
of Sri Lanka, the tourism industry, swelled to almost Rs. 4 billion as
at 2015 whilst the country continued debating if destination tourism
marketing would help the domestic leisure business. There was a lot of
rhetoric but what we saw was Sri Lanka flirted with this concept.
In the post-2009 era, the general notion was ‘peace will bring in the
tourists to the country.’ During this period, Sri Lanka saw an absence
of professional marketing without the services of a global advertising
agency, PR agency or a digital marketing partner. The campaigns that
were implemented were selected on a sole supplier basis and many of the
authorities who implemented have been summoned to FCID. To date, Sri
Lanka has failed to make payment to top media companies like Bloomberg
and CNN, to name a few.
Serving the Government
In 2015 when the new Government came to play, the industry once
again saw a strong private-public working model but the developments in
the last one year, especially the calling off of the ‘creative pitch’ by
the top seven global advertising agencies just two days before
proposals were to be submitted, once again surprised the industry. In
fact some quarters of the private sector have lost faith and have now
embarked on company-wise micro marketing programmes.
Whilst the visitor numbers are poised to touch 2.2 million visitors to
Sri Lanka, the absence of a focused destination marketing strategy has
led to a fuzzy imagery globally. This in turn has impacted the quality
of tourism that the country attracts. But sadly the status quo is that
as we speak there is not much headway on making the new Sri Lanka
tourism strategy hit the market place.
Implication to Sri Lanka
While the private sector has been driving brand-related demand
generation activities in Sri Lanka, there is yet merit on macro
destination marketing. I guess Sri Lanka needs to first do the basics
such as appointing a global advertising agency, PR agency in the key
market, and in today’s world a strong digital partner who has a creative
fair. It is only then that we can develop destination marketing
campaigns.
(The thoughts shared are the writer’s own ideas and not the views of the
organisations he serves in the public or private sector. He is a former
Chairman of the Sri Lanka Export Development Board, Sri Lanka Tourism
and retail giant Lanka Sathosa.)
(Courtesy of Daily FT; edited version)