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Monday, June 17, 2024

The IMF knife threatening democracy


The International Monetary Fund (IMF) delegation addressing the media in Colombo

The IMF after much fanfare released its third tranche from its Extended Fund Facility program for Sri Lanka amounting to US$ 336 million. These tranches that are released every six months after excruciating reviews and much trepidation in the media are peanuts! For example last year the remittances from Sri Lankan migrant workers on average was about US$ 500 million per month, compared to the IMF’s US$ 336 million every six months. Furthermore, Sri Lanka’s foreign earnings, whether it be remittances or export earnings, don’t have to be returned. However, the IMF funds are a loan that has to be paid back in foreign currency, and as I have shown in my previous column, for the US$ 3 billion IMF program over four years, we have to make interest payments alone of US$ 2 billion over the next ten years. 

IMF analysis

In this column, I address the IMF analysis and approach 

towards Sri Lanka’s economy. Furthermore, its 159-page document released last week is not just about the economy, but rather betrays a political push. The IMF’s mask is coming off as Sri Lanka approaches the presidential elections later this year, and parliamentary elections next year. The IMF is backing Sri Lanka’s authoritarian regime, which is uninterested in negotiating in the interest of its people and bending over backward to embrace the policies of the IMF. Worse, the IMF’s rhetoric betrays a blatant disregard for the democratic rights of the Sri Lankan people. 

 Free trade, attack on labour and privatization

The statement last week following the IMF Executive Board’s Second Review of the Sri Lanka programme had the following to say:

“The economy is starting to recover, inflation remains low, revenue collection is improving, and reserves continue to accumulate. Despite these positive developments, the economy is still vulnerable and the path to debt sustainability remains knife-edged.” 

While, the IMF programme with its devastating austerity measures were sold in Sri Lanka as the only assured path of recovery, we are now told that the path is “vulnerable” and “knife-edged”. In effect, there is the real possibility of another IMF program, which would be Sri Lanka’s eighteenth, and second default on its external debt.  

 Worrying policies

The threats to the economy they outline, in my view, are now more and more created by the IMF policies themselves; but such a situation in turn is used to justify further worrying policies. The statement goes on to push for more drastic measures: 

“Key priorities include steadfast implementation of the governance reforms; further trade liberalisation to promote exports and foreign direct investment; labour reforms to upgrade skills and increase female labour force participation; and state-owned enterprise reforms to improve efficiency and fiscal transparency, contain fiscal risks, and promote a level playing field for the private sector.” 

The IMF, while characterising the crisis in Sri Lanka as a problem of corruption that can be dealt with in governance, advances the global system of free markets that itself promotes a corrupt elite. Furthermore, it is such free markets that create repeated and deeper crises around the world, as with the seventy countries around the world like Sri Lanka that are in debt distress.   

Explicit language

In this context, the IMF has become bolder in its explicit language on Sri Lanka, as in the quote above calling for trade liberalization, labour reforms and privatisation. What these processes will do to aggravate the economic and social landscape of the country, as imports flood and destroy local production and livelihoods, workers and particularly women workers lose their rights and protections, and privatisation leads to unaffordable public services are of little concern to the IMF. The IMF’s main priority remains one of creating markets and profits for global capital. 

If the IMF’s cynical agenda of pushing Sri Lanka into the precipice of neoliberal cycles of crises is all too clear from its Executive Board at the beginning of its long report, the statement by the IMF Executive Director for Sri Lanka at the end of the report, speaking apparently for the country is even more worrying: 

“To mitigate any risks to the program posed by upcoming elections, our authorities are dedicated to protecting the hard-earned gains and frontloading measures in government revenue mobilisation and reserve accumulation. The key elements of the economic adjustment program supported by the EFF arrangement have been incorporated into the Economic Transformation Bill, which was submitted to Parliament in May 2024.” 

In my column two weeks ago, it is precisely the incorporation of the IMF targets, including the exact numbers of total public debt of 95% of GDP and external debt servicing each year of 4.5% of GDP, into Sri Lankan law with the Economic Transformation Bill that I critiqued. And here, the statement above is congratulating Sri Lanka for those very measures. The IMF is clearly on the side of a government without legitimacy seeking to make laws without a mandate that reify the IMF’s targets into law. 

The political opposition in Sri Lanka has a clear challenge before them. The opposition parties in the running to win state power claim they will renegotiate the IMF agreement, but they are yet to articulate how they will do that. If the political opposition does not articulate the concrete measures they will renegotiate or an alternative path altogether, they will be stuck with the baggage of a stagnating economy under the IMF straight jacket. But first they must realise that when the IMF says Sri Lanka’s economy is on a knife-edge and speaks of the “risks to [its] programme posed by upcoming elections”, it is in fact holding a knife to the throat of Sri Lanka’s democracy⍐. 

Source: 17 June 2024 Daily Mirror

IMF அதானி ஆட்சிக்கமைய நாட்டில் 90 புதிய சட்ட மூலங்கள்

 15 மிக முக்கியமான கட்டளைச் சட்டங்களை நடைமுறைப்படுத்த ஏற்பாடு!

திர்வரும் சில வாரங்களில் சுமார் 15 மிக முக்கியமான கட்டளைச் சட்டங்களை நிறைவேற்றுவதற்கான ஏற்பாடுகள் தற்போது மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டு வருவதாக நீதி அமைச்சர் விஜயதாச ராஜபக்ச (Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe) தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.

கடந்த 18 மாதங்களில் சுமார் 75 புதிய சட்டமூலங்கள் நாடாளுமன்றத்தில் சமர்ப்பிக்கப்பட்டு நிறைவேற்றப்பட்டு நாட்டுக்குத் தேவையான அடிப்படை மாற்றங்களைச் செய்ய முடிந்துள்ளதாகவும் அமைச்சர் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.

மேலும் தெரிவிக்கையில், ” இந்த காலகட்டத்தை நமது நாட்டின் நீதித்துறையில் நீதி நிர்வாகம் தொடர்பாக மிகப்பெரிய சட்ட சீர்திருத்தங்கள் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்ட காலகட்டமாக அறிமுகப்படுத்தலாம்.

இரண்டு மாற்றங்கள் 

கடந்த 18 மாதங்களில் சுமார் 75 புதிய சட்டமூலங்கள் நாடாளுமன்றத்தில் தாக்கல் செய்யப்பட்டு நிறைவேற்றப்பட்டுள்ளன.

அது நாட்டிற்கு தேவையான அடிப்படை மாற்றத்தை ஏற்படுத்த உதவும் என்பதை கவனத்தில் கொள்ள வேண்டும்.

15 மிக முக்கியமான கட்டளைச் சட்டங்களை நடைமுறைப்படுத்த ஏற்பாடு! 

 (Provision For Execution Of 15 Major Ordinances)

காதி நீதிமன்றம் தொடர்பாக இதுவரை பல பிரச்சனைகள் எழுந்துள்ளன. அதன்படி, இரண்டு மாற்றங்கள் முன்மொழியப்பட்டுள்ளன.

வெளிநாடுகளில் வழங்கப்படும் தீர்ப்புகள் தொடர்பான வெளிநாட்டு தீர்ப்புகளை செயல்படுத்துவதற்கான வரைவு சமர்ப்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

மேலும் அடுத்த சில வாரங்களில் சுமார் 15 மிக முக்கியமான அரசாணைகளை நிறைவேற்ற ஏற்பாடுகள் செய்யப்பட்டு வருகின்றன.

குற்றவியல் நடைமுறைச் சட்டத்திலும் பல திருத்தங்கள் முன்மொழியப்பட்டுள்ளன. நாங்கள் சமீபத்தில் நிறைவேற்றிய நீர் அறிவியல் சட்டத்தை அடுத்த ஆண்டு நடைமுறைப்படுத்தலாம்” என்றார்⍐.

Source: Tamilwin

Manohara, others warn of inherent dangers of 13-A

 

Manohara, others warn of inherent dangers of 13-A


‘That legislation in its entirety is illegal and contrary to the unitary status –Gen Dias

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The full implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution portends massive risks and, therefore, those political parties and alliance seeking to woo Tamil speaking voters should be wary of the threat to the country’s unitary status, top constitutional lawyer Manohara de Silva said yesterday.

The President’s Counsel was commenting on Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) and Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa’s recent declaration in Kilinochchi that the 13th Amendment would be implemented.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Jathika Jana Balawegaya (JJB), too, have declared their intention to fully implement the 13th Amendment in line with their overall bid to reach consensus with the Tamil National Alliance (TNA).

Pointing out that discussions on the 13th Amendment often centred on the need to grant land and police powers to the provinces, de Silva said that ancient and historical monuments and records, agriculture, irrigation, education, roads, as well as housing, come within the Provincial Council list.

The ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) is yet to state its position, officially, though about a year ago that party questioned the rationale in the incumbent President declaring his intention to fully implement the 13th Amendment against the backdrop of all previous Presidents having declined to do so.

Political parties shouldn’t, under any circumstance, forget that the concurrent list that included land acquisition, registration of births, renaming of villages, festivals (LTTE commemoration possible), archaeological sites, religious institutions are within the legislative and executive competence of Provincial Councils, the PC said.

When The Island pointed out that the Parliament could intervene to thwart threatening moves on the part of Provincial Councils, the Executive Committee member of the National Joint Committee emphasized that those who reached electoral agreements with the TNA wouldn’t be able to resist the coalition partner.

“Do you really think that the SJB leader, or any other presidential poll candidate, will be allowed, by coalition partners, to override the Provincial Council legislation on the concurrent list,” de Silva asked.

The outspoken lawyer pointed out that former Speaker and Deputy Leader of the UNP Karu Jayasuriya, in his current capacity as the Chairman of the National Movement of Social Justice (NMSJ) and the UK-headquartered Global Tamil Forum (GTF) have declared their support for the SJB’s position.

De Silva said that close on the heels of parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran, on behalf of the TNA, publicly regretting its decision to boycott the 2005 Presidential Polls, as directed by the LTTE – a contentious move that deprived Ranil Wickremesinghe of certain victory – Premadasa and JVP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake met the TNA leadership on Monday (10) and Tuesday (11), respectively.

The TNA parliamentary group consists of 10 MPs. In parliament, the TNA group is recognized as Illankai Thamil Arasu Kadchchi (ITAK).

De Silva said it would be interesting to see whether President Wickremesinghe, SJB leader Premadasa and JJB leader Dissanayake seek the support of other political parties representing the Northern and Eastern Provinces.

The other Tamil parties are the EPDP (two MPs), AITC (two), TMVP, TMTK (one). Of them, the EPDP and TMVP represent the Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government.

Retired General Jagath Dias who had been quite critical, recently, of the moves to fully implement the contentious piece of legislation, told The Island that though the right of political parties to engage in negotiations should be respected they couldn’t, under any circumstances, pursue an agenda inimical to national interests.

“There is absolutely no ambiguity. The 13th Amendment, forced on us by India under the Indo-Lanka Accord signed on July 29, 1987, in its entirety is illegal and contrary to our unitary status. That is the truth,” the war veteran said.

Having served the Army for over 35 years, Dias retired in Dec 2015 as the Chief of Staff. During Eelam War IV (August 2006-May 2009), Dias commanded the 57 Division that was tasked to liberate Kilinochchi.

Recalling the circumstances the 13th Amendment had been enacted, just months after India thwarted ‘Operation Liberation’ intended to clear the Jaffna peninsula of the LTTE, the former combat officer said that the piece of legislation should be constitutionally done away with.

Giving into unjust political demands made by the TNA/ITAK and trying to appease its Indian masters should be considered as a treacherous act, the Gajaba Regiment veteran said. Dias regretted that even 15 years after the eradication of separatist terrorism, the Parliament hadn’t taken into consideration post-war ground realities when addressing, what he called, the North East issues.

Both Manohara de Silva and Jagath Dias emphasized that the Eastern Province couldn’t be merged with the Northern Province just to appease those who still harboured separatist sentiments.

The Supreme Court in Oct 2006 declared that the merger of the two provinces, in line with the Indo-Lanka Accord, was defective and invalid.

The President’s Counsel said that the country’s unitary status, that had been preserved at a tremendous, cost couldn’t be abolished. Referring to recent reports of some group distributing leaflets in the North demanding that the Tamil electorate boycott the Presidential Poll, scheduled to be conducted later this year, until the unitary status is done away with, de Silva said those who genuinely value the eradication of the LTTE conventional fighting capacity should take a collective stand as regards the 13th Amendment⍐.

US welcomes IMF approval of Sri Lanka’s second review

 

Cartoon: SL Media

US welcomes IMF approval of Sri Lanka’s second review

ECONOMYNEXT — The United States has welcomed the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s approval of the second review of Sri Lanka’s IMF programme which allows for the disbursement of 330 million US dollars.


US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Julie Chung tweeted Friday June 14 that her government encourages Sri Lanka’s leaders to stay committed to measures needed to foster growth.


“Recognising that reforms can be challenging, the United States continues to encourage Sri Lanka’s leaders to stay committed to take needed measures that ensure accountability, transparency, and representative governance, to foster investment and growth,” she said.


Julie Chung – Image credit: Un Yarat]/Flickr

Chung met State Minister of Finance Shehan Semasinghe in Washington at the IMF Spring Meeting in April where she said Sri Lanka had made “great progress”.


“Pleasure to see State Minister Semasinghe ahead of his trip to Washington for the IMF Spring Meeting, an opportunity for policymakers, economists, and stakeholders to collaborate on finding solutions to global economic challenges and promote international economic cooperation.


“Sri Lanka has made great progress on the IMF program, and we hope Sri Lanka can take the final steps necessary to unlock the next round of funding that will promote economic stability, foster growth, and improve the welfare of the people of Sri Lanka,” she tweeted at that,” said. 


( Economy Next Colombo/Jun14/2024)



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