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, March 13, 2019
Sri Lanka: Budget 2019 By The Man For All Seasons
The situation became different after 1977 with the changeover to a presidential system, proportional representation and the establishment of provincial governments and their elections.
by Rajan Philips-MARCH 12, 2019
By any measure, Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera is Sri Lanka’s man
for all seasons in politics. He has been in opposition to both UNP
(1989-1994 and 2002-2004) and SLFP (2007 to 2014) governments. Equally,
he has been a Minister in both SLFP (1994-2007) and UNP (2015 - )
governments. He has been a Minister, as well, under every President
after 1994, and has had more than a hand in ending the presidency of two
of them and is about to play the same role for the third and the
current President. However, in the spirit of social camaraderie that
cuts through political acrimony in Sri Lanka, all three Presidents and
the Prime Minister showed up to concelebrate Mr. Samaraweera’s 30 years
in politics at the BMICH. Quite simply, there is no one to match
Mangala’s versatility and his political peer-popularity. In the matter
of inter-communal politics, or national reconciliation, Mangala
Samaraweera is the most popular Sinhalese minister among the Tamils just
as Lakshman Kadirgamar was the most popular Tamil minister among the
Sinhalese. The elusive common ground is lying somewhere in between.
The common ground that Mangala Samaraweera (MS) is now more urgently
looking for is in the realm of the economy, to offer the largest amount
of goodies to satisfy the largest number voters and their families or
businesses in the hope garnering votes for the UNP and its allies in the
upcoming elections. Which one? Economic commentators have advised the
Minister against producing an election budget, cautioning about the long
term economic pains involved in going after short term electoral gains.
But no government or Finance Minister can ignore electoral and
political realities in presenting an election year budget. The
conventional economic wisdom of short term pain for long term gain,
while it will not find any political traction in an election year, is
also becoming questionable in light of the frequent ups and downs in
national and global economies.
What is more, austerity and belt-tightening are almost always undertaken
targeting the more vulnerable in society, whereas the more
consequential businesses who time and again trigger economic collapses
are protected by governments from self-destruction because they are
deemed too big to fail for the good of everyone else. This tautology is
not applicable to Sri Lanka, where the private sector is not a big
shaker of the economy and its role in the economy is defined more by
fits and starts than by consistent policy framework of the government or
by coherent responses of the private sector to market forces.
The good and the bad
In his new budget, the Finance Minister chose to differentiate the good
segment of the private sector from its bad segment. The good ones are
represented by "the genuine entrepreneur" competing in a "fair market",
the "small and mid-size businesses that embody the spirit of Sri Lankan
trade and commerce, and the Sri Lankan companies that compete on the
global stage and win." The reprobates are the Rajapaksa favourites and
the "beneficiaries of crony capitalism … walls of tariff … (and)
inflated Government contracts." In a bit of bravado, the Minister
declared: the latter group "is not the private sector that we want to
see as the engine of economic growth, but (is) a vestige of a bygone
era." The elections will determine who will be gone and who will return
to power. But which election and that is the question.
The next one and a half years are going to see a presidential election, a
parliamentary election, and potentially quite a few or all nine
provincial elections. We do not know if the Finance Minister and his
advisers prepared a budget for any particular election, or for any and
all elections. While an electorally appealing budget might tip the
scales in favour of a reasonably popular government, no amount of
budgetary inducements will be enough to help a chronically unpopular
government win a national election. It is fair to say that until 1977,
when we had the parliamentary system and the elections were based on the
first-past-the-post method, no finance minister was able to produce a
magical budget that could help a sitting government win an election.
With the exception of the sitting UNP government winning the 1952
election, every sitting government was thrown out of office in spite of
or regardless of the election year budget. So the argument that Sri
Lanka’s economy has stumbled and stalled because of election budgeting
does not hold much water.
The situation became different after 1977 with the changeover to a
presidential system, proportional representation and the establishment
of provincial governments and their elections. Budgets became of even
less significance – as governments in power manipulated the timing of
elections and blatantly abused the resources of the state to win any and
all elections for the governing alliance. In contrast to the fate of
sitting governments before 1977, the governments after 1977 have been
able to extend their stay in office beyond a single term simply by
electoral manipulations and abuses of power. Their economic performance
had very little to do with their relative longevity in office. Thus the
UNP government elected in 1977 stayed on till 1994. And its SLFP
successor lasted even longer from 1994 to 2014.
The present government is in a peculiar pickle. It is a divided
government. There is President Sirisena who is pre-occupied with staging
his own ‘nadagama’ and seeking his own re-election. Then there is the
parliamentary government of Prime Minister Wickremesinghe that includes
Mangala Samaraweera as Finance Minister. In a presidential election,
Sirisena and Wickremesinghe might be contenders, and while Prime
Minister Wickremesinghe goes about claiming credit for whatever he
considers as economic success, President Sirisena will be denouncing UNP
economic policies and claiming that it was he who protected the country
from being sold out by the UNP. Mr. Samaraweera’s budget will be
criticised by his President who is also the Head of the cabinet of
ministers.
Which election?
Whether it is the presidential election or parliamentary elections, the
real contest will be between the UNP and the SLPP of the Rajapaksas.
President Sirisena and his shrinking band of SLFPers will be put in
their place even before the nominations are closed. The Samaraweera
budget is full of ammunition to be used against the Rajapaksas in an
election campaign. Without naming names, the budget blames the political
crisis triggered by the Sirisena-Rajapaksa constitutional misadventure
on 26 October 2018 for the country’s failure to take advantage of global
economic changes towards the end of last year. But the October crisis
also gave a political advantage to the Prime Minister and the UNP
allies. The advantage has since been lost mostly. And the budget
attempts to recapture some of that advantage by distributing generous
handouts to please different sections of the population through 15
program avenues ranging from "Gamperaliya – Accelerating Village
Development" to "Reconciliation through economic development".
One of the 15 avenues is "Public Sector Service Delivery," which is
nothing more than a euphemism for providing salary increases in the
public sector, continuing the trend that was started in the present
government’s first budget in 2015. The measure was ridiculed then as a
ploy to win votes in the August parliamentary election. In that election
the momentum was clearly with the UNP and the salary ploy may or may
not have played any significant part. In fact, in the assessment of some
UNP insiders the UNP failed to win a clear majority because of the
Central Bank bond scandal. 2019 is a different political world entirely,
and the salary increases are more likely to end as more money down the
drain than assured votes in the ballot box.
The fundamental challenge facing this government or any other government
is not about finding a mix of economic measures to facilitate steady
economic growth. It is about putting in place structures and
institutions of governance to implement the different policies and
programs for economic growth and social welfare. That was supposed the
biggest purpose of this government. It has now become its biggest
failure. The budget envisions an "Enterprise Sri Lanka – Empowering the
People and Nurturing the Poor." Ideologically, this is trying to be all
things to all people. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with it so
long as there will be as many things as possible available as many
people as possible. The budget may not have the long life it needs to
test its own success or failure.
The budget will soon become secondary to the main question about the
sequence of elections that our political leaders will foist on the
country. There seems to be growing interest among President Sirisena,
Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and former President Mahinda Rajapaksa –
to modify the existing presidential system along the lines of the JVP’s
20th Amendment proposal. That will eliminate the presidential election
this year and will advance the parliamentary election from next year to
this year. Provincial elections will have to slip through the gap one
more time. The ideas around this move have been there for years. Only
now they are germinating because it suits the selfish needs and
political constraints of the three leaders.
Each one has a major handicap in being a presidential candidate. So why
not get rid of the damn presidency itself. That seems to be the
motivation. Mahinda Rajapaksa is barred from running again. Gotabhaya
Rajapkaksa is a problem candidate in many ways. Maithripala Sirisena
can’t find anyone who will trust him as a candidate again. And after so
many defeats, Ranil Wickremesinghe must surely be overburdened with
self-doubt about his own chances again as a presidential candidate after
14 years. So it must make awful sense to them, cynically and severally,
that it is best to modify the presidential system and get rid of the
direct presidential election.
Should these developments take place, Miathripala Srisena could have
another term as President, but only as the Head of State and not the
head of government. Ranil Wickremesinghe and Mahinda Rajapaksa will be
left to duke it out in a parliamentary election. The budget and its
effects may be forgotten by then. What might loom larger than any other
spectre is what is going on in the courts - how the political actors
will position themselves in response to what the police are finding and
what cases are brought to trial. All three leaders have long thought
that such a day of reckoning may never come. It may yet come and no one
knows how that will impact any and all elections.