Tuesday, July 3, 2018

For Sri Lanka, More and Better Jobs Are Critical to Reach Upper-Middle Income Status

Despite natural disasters, Sri Lanka is reaping the benefits of improved revenue collection and managed expenditures and, has thus recorded a primary fiscal surplus for the first time in decades.

However, the current domestic political environment has slowed reforms and complicated the stable medium-term outlook.

To create more and better jobs, Sri Lanka needs to address low female labour force participation and youth unemployment.

( June 29, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) In 2017, for the first time in decades, Sri Lanka’s fiscal revenue exceeded expenditures excluding interest payments, leading to a primary fiscal surplus.
However, despite this and other improvements in macroeconomic performance, the island nation remains vulnerable.
Natural disasters continue to take their toll on the GDP, while the pace of urgent fiscal reforms has lagged in a challenging political environment, says the World Bank Sri Lanka’s new Development Update (SLDU).
Released twice a year, the report analyses the country’s performance over the last six months and highlights crucial developments against the global context.
The latest edition of the SLDU notes that economic growth slowed down to a 16-year low in 2017 due mainly to adverse weather conditions.
This had a knock-on effect, as inflationary pressures remained high due to drought, VAT changes, and demand pressures. The external trade balance weakened, and agriculture and related sectors were hit hard by successive floods and droughts, resulting in growth decelerating to 3.3 percent.
On the balance, official reserves hit a record high in April 2018 thanks to capital inflows. Growth is expected to rebound in 2018 from a low base and continue to be around 4.3 percent in the medium term, driven by private consumption and investment. The VAT reforms were among several measures that led to improved revenue collection. Implementation of the Inland Revenue Act — which came into effect in April 2018 — is expected to structurally increase tax revenue.
“Sri Lanka’s march towards Upper-Middle-Income status and more and better jobs hinges on the economy’s competitiveness and its ability to pursue a private investment-tradable sector-led growth model,” says Ralph Van Doorn, the World Bank’s Senior Economist for Sri Lanka and the Maldives.
Highlighting the challenges posed by domestic political considerations and institutional constraints on implementing policies, Van Doorn added, “A strong political will and support of the bureaucracy could help advance the reform agenda.”

Sri Lanka’s outlook remains stable but is conditional on reforms

To transition into Upper-Middle-Income status, Sri Lanka will have to embrace a new growth model and improve its economy’s competitiveness.
With that in mind, the government has begun to implement the extensive and ambitious reforms outlined in Vision 2025, notably phasing out of para-tariffs, simplifying and speeding up procedures for investment, trade and setting up a business.
Aimed at enhancing competitiveness, improving governance and streamlining public financial management, the reforms are expected to bring in long-term benefits.
However, a challenging domestic political environment has already taken a toll, slowing down some reforms and complicating the stable medium-term outlook. An impending election cycle only elevates this risk.
Delays in improving tax administration are among the risks Sri Lanka must confront on the fiscal front. As successive instances of extreme weather have demonstrated, natural disasters could have an adverse impact on growth, the fiscal budget, the external sector and poverty reduction.
Further, public spending is only expected to increase as the country’s demographic transition advances, putting pressure on pension and healthcare systems.
To stay on track, Sri Lanka will have to invest in continued fiscal consolidation – by further increasing revenue and creating fiscal space for growth-supporting public investment.

High fiscal risks from public and state-owned enterprises

Even as the central government’s debt to GDP ratio declined to 77.6 percent, it remains high compared to other middle-income countries and is subject to risks. Implementing the new Active Liability Management Act is critical to deal with the risks of refinancing the Eurobonds maturing between 2019 and 2022.
Sri Lanka’s sizeable state-owned enterprise (SOE) sector is struggling, with SOE debt growing mainly due to the absence of cost reflective pricing of electricity and weak operational performance.Recent introduction of cost reflective pricing for fuel is an important measure to reduce fiscal risks.
An integrated risk management approach is needed to manage debt and contingent liabilities linked to SOEs and the impact of natural disasters. Implementing without further delay the cost-reflective energy pricing for electricity, and establishing a unified debt management office are critical.
In a context of high domestic interest rates, the gradual tightening of global financial conditions and an expected gradual depreciation of the exchange rate, increased fiscal discipline will prove critical. If seen through, continued fiscal consolidation will continue to reduce the debt burden in the medium term.

More and better jobs are critical to reach upper-middle income country status

During the last decade, the employment rate in Sri Lanka decreased on average by 0.5 percent every year. Low female labor force participation and increasing unemployment among youth have contributed to Sri Lanka’s low employment rate. As the country prepares to embrace a new private investment-tradable sector-led growth model, a large, skilled labor force will be vital to driving growth and addressing the challenges presented by the demographic transition to an aging population.
Improving the supply of jobs, through attracting more foreign direct investments (FDI) to plug into global and regional value chains, improving the environment for trade, business, innovation and entrepreneurship are essential.
Equally important is addressing the supply of labor, by encouraging female labor force participation and equipping students with the relevant skills required in an aspiring Upper Middle-Income economy.
Regional disparities are yet to be addressed. The consequences of the conflict are still visible in the labor outcomes in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, with employment rates in these provinces still below the national average – 44 and 42 percent in the Northern and Eastern Provinces as compared to employment rates of 50 and 54 percent in the Western Province and other provinces, respectively. It is clear that post-conflict provinces need to create the most jobs.
Across the board, reforms could grow the Sri Lankan workforce as the country aims to create more and better jobs through a knowledge-based, highly competitive, social market economy focused on inclusion.