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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, December 1, 2013
A lacklustre budget debate
Editorial-November 30, 2013, 4:43 pm
Given
the government’s comfortable parliamentary majority, the passage of the
second reading of the 2014 budget on Friday after a lackluster debate
surprised nobody. There is no doubt that the Mahinda Rajapaksa
government, with Treasury Secretary P.B. Jayasundera responsible for all
its budgets since 2005, has retained policy consistency. Massive
infrastructure expenditure continues despite unanswered questions on
whether the country is getting the best prices for such projects as well
as whether some deserve the priority that have been accorded to them.
The Economist Intelligence Unit has seen the budget as a ``mix of
small-scale concessions to key voters’’ including the rural majority and
the bloated public sector. UNP MP Eran Wickremaratne was not wrong when
he said in the course of the debate that the government’s solution to
unemployment is providing state sector jobs for its supporters and
`exporting’ citizen to work abroad.
There is no serious argument that the state sector is over crowded and
many of those paid from the public purse are not doing any productive
work. In a country with a population of about 20 million, there are 1.4
million government employees according to Wickremaratne’s count. About a
third of them are with the police and the security services, he said in
his budget speech. There was an expectation that the armed services
will be downsized after the end of the war; but that has not happened
possibly for good reason. Demobilizing men trained to fight without
suitable alternative employment can obviously lead to problems such as
those Bangladesh faced after its liberation war. Here in Sri Lanka too
we have seen military deserters who have stolen service weapons engaging
in criminal activity. There has been a serious effort to deploy
servicemen for civilian duties facilitated in part by the Ministries of
Defence and Urban Development being brought together. Whether this has
resulted in a cost: benefit advantage to the taxpayer has not been
demonstrated.
The size of the cabinet and the multiplicity of ministries have resulted
in weakened parliamentary control of public expenditure. Quite apart
from too little notice being taken to COPE and PAC reports, for the
first time in our post-Independence history we saw the government
adopting a device of getting a clutch of ministries to have their votes
discussed and approved by an all-party standing committee rather than
parliament itself as has been hitherto done. Parliament will merely
debate the report of this standing committee. Given the number of
ministries loaded on the backs of the taxpayer to accommodate UNP
defectors and UPFA loyalists, there was insufficient parliamentary time
for the budget debate to be concluded in the usual manner. It is a pity
that the opposition permitted this to happen without audible protest.
Now that the precedent has been set, the chances are that succeeding
governments of whatever political complexion will continue to follow the
bad example of jumbo cabinets and multiplicity of ministries. CHOGM
possibly ate into some parliamentary time this year compelling resort to
the standing committee device. But the opposition, as far as we are
aware, did not demand or obtain an assurance that this would not be
regular practice.
Sri Lanka’s present ranking as a middle income country has shut the door
to concessional funding it received in the past for development
purposes. This compelled the government to resort to expensive
commercial borrowing abroad and this has naturally raised concern in
recent years with many critics regarding foreign debt levels
particularly as way too high. Servicing and repaying such debt require
further borrowing at higher rates of interest. These rollovers, as they
are termed, inevitably become progressively more expensive as we have
seen. In fact, the question has been raised why our banks pay only a
fraction of the interest paid on dollar bonds to local holdings of
foreign exchange in resident and non-resident foreign currency accounts
(NRFCs and RFCs) in Sri Lankan banks. The answer to that question is
fairly obvious. NRFC and RFC account holders are captive lenders whose
interest payments are determined at rates fixed through limited
competition between local banks. Attractive rates, far higher than those
prevailing in overseas markets, must be offered to sell our dollar
bonds. This has been done and the various bond issues have been
comfortably subscribed. We have thankfully never defaulted on our debt
obligations, either local or foreign, and the government’s intention of
raising a further USD 1.5 billion overseas was announced in the budget.
Ideally export earnings should generate a substantial proportion of our
foreign debt service and repayment obligations. This, unfortunately, has
not been happening in recent years.
It is doubtful that the opposition collectively, and the UNP in
particular, has the gumption to undermine the government even on issues
such as the lack of good governance, financial profligacy and its
various acts of omission and commission. As Minister Basil Rajapaksa was
to say in his speech winding-up the second reading debate on Friday, in
2007 the government risked being toppled on the budget but ``thanks to
some UNP MPs’’ (read defectors rewarded with cabinet office), that was
not to be. The country is very well aware that President Mahinda
Rajapaksa and his brothers, Economic Development Minister Basil
Rajapaksa and Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa controls nearly 50
percent of the budget. This has been repeated often enough but not
evoked the kind of angry response among ordinary people that the
opposition would hope to provoke. The man in the street concerned about
making ends meet in the context of the ever rising cost of living does
not bother about familial rule and who controls budgeted expenditure.
He’s more concerned about the price of dried haalmessas (sprats) and
parippu that MP Sudharshini Fernandopulle (Mrs. Jeyaraj) spoke about
from the government benches. She appealed for relief from price
increases for these essential protein providers for the poor man. The
UNP’s Rosy Senanayake pointedly raised the question of increasing the
price of sanitary napkins while reducing the duty (why oh why?) on men’s
neckties.
While making dhal more expensive was probably to support an import
substitution strategy by encouraging people to switch to alternatives
like locally grown cowpea, green gram and other pulses, sprats are
another matter. Local production would never match demand and the
chances are that people will perforce have to switch to another imported
product – canned fish. Hiking duty on imported sanitary napkins would
also have been intended to give a fillip to local manufacturers. With
Christmas round the corner, it is likely that a consumer concession on
dhal and sprats will probably be announced in the third reading stage of
the budget debate same way duty on imported potatoes and onions were
reduced pre-budget. But these are hardly concessions that would enable
the poor to eat better.