How can Sri Lankan charities find international donors and partners?

Why The Shock Over IMF’s Diagnostic Report? 

- colombotelegraph.com

By Ameer Ali

Dr. Ameer Ali

IMF’s 128 pages diagnostic document released after auditing Sri Lanka’s economic performance over the last 12 months since receiving the first tranche of IMF’s $2.9 billion EFF has been received with shock and awe by different segments of local political groups and intelligentsia.  But to those who had been studying closely the history of political economy and governance of this country since independence the only novelty about the report seems to be that it comprehensively lists in technical language the ills of the country’s system of governance with an underlying warning that if those ills are not attended to with urgency and removed within a certain time frame IMF’s continued assistance and economic recovery would be thrown into jeopardy.  Therefore, the task that lies before the nation is nothing more or less than a wholesale and paradigmatic change of the prevailing socio-economic structure and its political culture. To call such a change revolution may be unfashionable these days, but is there a better terminology than that to describe the scale and nature of the change needed? 

After listing those ills, which had created a poly-crisis of which economic bankruptcy is the most prominent, the report has this to say about those ills: “These weaknesses and vulnerabilities highlight several broader governance themes that need to be addressed for planned reforms to be sustained.  Problematic structural issues that shape governance dynamics include the compromised independence of key government institutions, critical gaps in the legal and regulatory infrastructure for managing and overseeing public resources, limited fiscal discipline and transparency, and a disorganized regulatory and legislative process that provides for insufficient review and engagement”.  All this could be summarized in one word: CORRUPTION. It was the endemic corruption that sapped the vitality of state institutions, it was corruption that bankrupted the economy and sunk it in an ocean of debt, and it was corruption that allowed more than $50 billion according to one minister to fly away from the country.  (That minister is now suggesting to grant amnesty for a limited period to encourage dollar hoarders to bring that wealth back to the country. That tactic was tried even before during Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s presidency without success when his handpicked CBSL Governor Prof. W. D. Lakshman encouraged money laundering to attract hoarded dollars to be brought back with no questions asked).  

But there is one important factor which the report misses to emphasize, and that is the ideological foundation and the architectural shape of the country’s system of governance. The entire state machinery that exists today and the human power that operates that machinery are driven by the ethnoreligious ideology of Sinhala Buddhist supremacy. From the time when political Buddhism emerged as an unchallengeable force in the 1950s it enabled its supporters to highjack all institutions of democracy and make them subservient to the hegemonic ideals of political Buddhism. That ideology provided social licensing without accountability for those in power and positions of prestige to exploit the state apparatus and resources to whatever purpose/s those powerholders deemed fit and necessary. Even the institution of judiciary was subverted to fulfil that objective. Constitutions were made, unmade and remade to entrench the hegemony and power of political Buddhism. The ultimate objective of that ideology is to convert the heterogenous polity of Sri Lanka into a homogenous one and that exercise was couch under neutral objective called national development. Without building a unified nation to start with and describe the growing inter communal dissension and disparity as national development is contradiction in terms. And if any crisis manifested in the course of realizing that hegemonic objective the nation’s minority communities became the scapegoats.  What the country witnesses today is the end product of a systematic and systemic misrule. In that perspective, Sri Lanka’s post-independence history has been one of internal decay with occasional external glitter. Thus, IMF’s findings are nothing to get shocked. It was a technically couched presentation of what is already known to the public.  

There is no more evidence necessary to demonstrate the prevailing hopelessness and despair that is engulfing the country than the unstoppable exodus of its professionals, academics, experts and the entrepreneurial.  It was more the push from inside than pull from outside that had set the pace of this brain drain. In terms of textbook economics that outflow is said to continue until the marginal revenue equals the marginal cost of emigrating.This exodus of the able and talented, if anything, is a public vote of no confidence on President Wickremesinghe’s braggadocio about transforming Sri Lanka into an outward looking high-tech export economy miracle.  

Even in terms of economic achievement the IMF auditing team has its reservations. Apart from the usual plaudits about the regime’s determination and commitment to IMF’s agenda, its mission chief Peter Breuer was concerned about an expected revenue fall of 15% by this year’s end. What this means is that either the tax rates should be raised or tax collection has to become robust or both. Tax collection is a perennial problem not because of tax minimization which is legitimate but because of illegitimate tax evasion unchecked by official tax collectors. IMF wants public revenue be raised to 12% by the end of 2024 from its abysmal 8.8% in 2022.  But officials from the Finance Ministry and CBSL had met the Minister of Finance who is none other than President RW and told him in no uncertain terms that the people cannot be taxed anymore and that there are other reasons why revenue had fallen. They failed to elaborate however, what those other reasons are. In that context, the 2023-24 budget is going to be a challenging one and it would decide the fate of IMF’s second tranche. But fall in public revenue is only one of a myriad of problems confronting the nation.  CBSL’s limited achievement in creating an atmosphere of monetary stability with low inflation and foreign currency accumulation through remittances and tourism is only temporary until the whole economy is open to free market forces.  To be more precise, the solution to the economic crisis has to include reforms outside the economic arena. It is in that sense the IMF diagnostic report reflects the need of the hour.      

The question that faces the nation now is who or which political group is going to undertake this massive task. Without change in the system the economic recovery agenda as scheduled by IMF is not going to achieve its objective.  As a matter of fact, none of the existing political parties except NPP has taken the challenge seriously.  Because, none one of them is prepared to confront the advocates who hold the foundational ideology sacrosanct.  There is no more evidence necessary to prove this cowardice than the unholy silence of all political leaders to express their disgust and condemn openly the growing communal tumult in the north and east of the country spearheaded by demagogues of political Buddhism.  With the economy demanding united action, commitment and sacrifice at a national level this tumult is leading the country towards another communal showdown. In the meantime, RW who carries the credit for getting the IMF involved in repairing the economy, is now finding politically incapacitated to implement the reforms required by the report, because those reforms would put him also on the dock. Hence, would he exploit the growing tumult to cancel all elections and continue to remain in power while promising to fine tune the current system to satisfy IMF? There need to be continued resistance from the masses against such manipulation. That resistance has to be sustained until those reforms are undertaken and implemented by whoever holds the reins of power.  Unfortunately, the poplar mindset of Sri Lankan voters is not tuned to such a prolonged struggle.  Changing pillows alone is not enough to cure the headache. Therefore, the rot is set to continue.     

*Dr. Ameer Ali, Murdoch Business School, Murdoch University, W. Australia       

The post Why The Shock Over IMF’s Diagnostic Report?  appeared first on Colombo Telegraph.

You may also like

- adaderana.lk

Three individuals from the Pahala Karannagoda area of Warakagoda in Kalutara, have died due to a sudden illness after consuming illicit liquor.

- onlanka.com

An associate of the organized criminal Maddumage Lasantha Chandana Perera, also known as ‘Angoda Lokka,’ was apprehended at Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) in Katunayake.The post Key associate of ‘Angoda Lokka’ apprehended at BIA with forged passport appeared first on Sri Lanka News | Breaking News & Top Stories in Sri Lanka | ONLANKA.

- onlanka.com

The Indian Coast Guard (ICG) confiscated 86 kg of suspected heroin valued at INR 6.02 billion from a Pakistani boat, which was heading to Sri Lanka.The post Indian Coast Guard seize 86kg drugs from Pakistan boat heading to Sri Lanka appeared first on Sri Lanka News | Breaking News & Top Stories in Sri Lanka | ONLANKA.

- adaderana.lk

Police have arrested a Software Engineer along with several types of drugs including Hash and Kush Cannabis which have been smuggled to Sri Lanka from Italy.

- island.lk

Dubai has started work on a $35bn airport terminal that is set to have the world’s largest capacity upon completion, the emirate’s ruler has said. Dubai’s Prime Minister and Vice President Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum said on Sunday that the new terminal would be five times the size of the current Dubai International […]

- island.lk

Weather forecast issued at 05.30 a.m. on 29 April 2024 by the Department of Meteorology The Inter tropical Convergence Zone (where winds from the Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere converge) is affecting the island’s weather. Misty conditions can be expected at some places in Sabaragamuwa and Central provinces during the morning. Showers or thundershowers may […]

Resources for Sri Lankan Charities:View All

How important are accountability and transparency for a charity to receive international donations
How important are accountability and transparency for a charity to receive international donations

Sri Lankan Events:View All

Sep 02 - 03 2023 12:00 am - 1:00 am Sri Lankan Events - Canada
Sep 09 2023 7:00 pm Sri Lankan Events - Australia
Sep 16 2023 6:00 pm - 11:30 pm Sri Lankan Events - USA
Oct 14 2023 8:00 am Sri Lankan Events - UK

Entertainment:View All

Technology:View All

Local News

Local News

Sri Lanka News

@2023 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Rev-Creations, Inc