Features
REPUBLICANS UNITE BEHIND TRUMP
by Vijaya Chandrasoma
Last week saw the continuing disintegration of the last vestiges of opposition against Trump’s Republican nomination for the 2024 presidential election.
Competition
Trump’s leadership of the Republican Party seems unassailable. He is leading his rivals for the Republican nomination for 2024 by at least 30 points, with former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley edging Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for second place, the only two reaching double digits. Haley may be enjoying a moment, but she seems destined for the undercard on the 2024 Republican ticket.
Conservative politicians, including his under-performing rivals for the nomination, refuse to publicly criticize Trump’s mental and moral deterioration, his lies, his ignorance and his vulgarity, his multitude of arrests and impending and ongoing criminal trials. They go with the Party’s treasonous flow, in fear of Trump’s kindergarten taunts, social media posts of wrath, and revenge by the armed, violent, white supremacist goons that constitute his “cult”. They also fear, if they do publicly denounce Trump, they will be “primaried” and lose their jobs in the next election. Self and treason before country and democracy is the current mantra of the Party of Trump.
In a recent speech announcing the suspension of his candidacy before a Republican Jewish conference in Las Vegas, former Vice President Pence said, “The Bible tells us that there’s a time for every purpose under heaven. …. It’s become clear to me that this is not my time. So I have decided to suspend my campaign for president, effective today”.
The fact that it was not Pence’s time became clear when his support in the polls had dwindled to 4%, his campaign finances dried up and it was doubtful if he would even qualify for the third Republican debate, scheduled for November 8 in Miami, Florida.
In any event, it has been clear to most Americans that the 21st century has never been “his time”. Pence’s time was in 1620, when he should have been the leader of the Christian Pilgrims who made landfall on Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts, on the Mayflower.
Snowballs would have a better chance of surviving in hell, rather than any of these losers getting the better of Trump. His nomination for the 2024 Republican presidency seems to be locked. He will contest the presidency even as a convicted felon under house arrest, pending prison sentence. The only Republican who has any chance of beating Trump is Trump himself. And, on current form, he will.
Disqualification to Run for the Presidency – The 14th Amendment
Hearings began last week on the lawsuit filed by Republican and unaffiliated lawyers in Colorado, represented by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW). A case to determine whether the 14th Amendment disqualifies Trump from running for president in 2024. Several objections by Trump’s lawyers to have the case dismissed have been denied.
According to a strict interpretation of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, Trump should be disqualified from ever holding public office. His guilt in the incitement of the January 6 insurrection was obvious to anyone who owns a TV receiver. However, it is likely that the case, which will ultimately be decided by the corrupt US Supreme Court with its 6/3 Republicans majority, will be Dead on Arrival.
The Israeli Holocaust
I hate to waste many words on the Israeli-Palestine War, when the logical conclusion, the illegal annexation of Palestine by Israel, is predictably foregone. A war intensified after the gruesome massacre of 1,400 Israeli civilians, men, women, and children by Hamas terrorists on October 7.
As brutal as this attack was, Netanyahu has since been waging what he terms “Israel’s War of Independence”. The Israeli Defense Force (IDF) already has killed over 9,000 Palestinian civilians in Gaza, and seriously wounded another 22,000. The Israeli airstrikes have been targeting hospitals and refugee camps, on the pretext of going after Hamas terrorists. The ground invasion of Northern Gaza is also under way. To confine attacks on Hamas terrorists alone is an impossible task, as these terrorists live among nearly two million Palestinian civilians in the tiny, 140 square miles of land that is the Gaza Strip.
The Israelis produced gruesome pictures of civilians, men, women and children brutally tortured and killed by Hamas, on October 7, which sickened the world. Now the world is sickened by equally gruesome pictures of Palestinian civilians, men, women and children, being murdered, hospitals and refugee camps demolished by Israeli airstrikes. Both sides, the sovereign state of Israel and the terrorist group of Hamas continue to be guilty of violating international law and committing war crimes.
Netanyahu is totally against even considering a ceasefire, and any attempt to negotiate a political solution, is as unlikely as that may seem. But international opinion is that this ceaseless killing of innocent civilians must stop, at any cost.
The fate of the near 240 hostages, including Americans, remain in the balance. Mediation with Hamas by Qataris, at the request of the Americans, to secure the release of the hostages seems to be making some progress.
As I said, there is only one conclusion possible to this injustice perpetrated by the Europeans and Jews against the Palestinians since 1947. Netanyahu’s Israeli version of Hitler’s Final Solution will soon result in the Biblical Jewish State of Israel. The Palestine homeland would have ceased to exist, and Palestinians exterminated or displaced in the not-too-distant future.
There is ominous evidence that Hezbollah, the terrorist organization backed both by Iran and Russia, has its fingers on the trigger. The possible escalation of the conflict to another full-scale Middle-Eastern war, involving the participation of the superpowers, may precipitate the unthinkable.
Americans, Republicans and Democrats, have always stood firmly behind Israel during this genocide and illegal annexation of land belonging to Palestinians, land which has been their home for centuries. And why not? White Americans have extensive historical experience in the successful, violent and illegal occupation of land belonging to indigenous peoples.
Anti-Semitic and Islamophobia Attacks in the US and the World.
Since the October 7 Hamas massacre and the resultant Israeli war against Palestinians in Gaza, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has recorded a 388% spike in anti-Semitic attacks across the United States, directly linked to the war. According to ADL CEO, Johnathan Greenblatt, “When conflicts erupt in Israel, anti-Semitic incidents soon follow in the US and globally….We are witnessing a disturbing rise in anti-Semitic activity here, while the war rages overseas”.
FBI Director, Christopher Wray acknowledged that threats of violent domestic terrorism have “surged as the conflict in Israel escalates”. This is violence targeting both Jews and Muslims.
The recent war against Palestinians has resulted in an explosion of Jewish hatred throughout the world. One especially disturbing act last week was the burning of the Jewish section of Vienna’s central cemetery, with Nazi swastikas desecrating external walls.
Flipping of Co-Conspirators
Many of Trump’s co-conspirators are entering into plea deals in the state and federal cases against him. Many have agreed to testify against him on condition of immunity or milder penalties.
The most damning co-conspirator to so flip is his former Chief of Staff, Mark Meadows, who was Trump’s right-hand man in all his dealings in the attempt to rig the 2020 election, before and after the date. He was also seen to be involved in the planning and attempted implementation of the January 6 insurrection and its violent aftermath. Meadows has offered to testify, in the federal trial beginning March 4, 2024, against Trump on condition of immunity. His evidence will surely and finally nail Trump.
New York $250 mn. fraud case
Trump’s children were scheduled to testify last week at the New York $250 million fraud case against the Trump Organization. Sons Donald Jr and Eric testified last Wednesday and Thursday. They both testified as expected, stating they had nothing to do with the fraudulent statements filed with the IRS and insurance companies. “The accountants worked on these documents. That is what we pay them for”, said Donald Jr. They both claimed that they just signed whatever papers put before them. This testimony contradicts other evidence, like e-mails, produced by the Court.
Ivanka has appealed the ruling ordering her to testify, on the grounds that she is no longer a resident of New York. The appeal is likely to be rejected, and she will be compelled to testify, probably next week.
Donald Trump is scheduled to testify next Wednesday. Like he did over 440 times in a previous civil case, Trump is likely to “to plead the Fifth”, the constitutional amendment which enables a witness to refuse to answer questions on grounds of self-incrimination. The difference between civil and criminal cases is that while, in criminal cases, a witness who pleads the Fifth cannot have that held against him, in civil cases the judge and/or jury can assume that a witness who pleads the Fifth does so because his answers will be damaging to the case against him.
Election of Speaker in the US House of Representatives
Kevin McCarthy was removed from his post of Speaker, House of Representatives by a handful of far-right Republican members, on October 4. The Republican majority in the House was unable to elect a Speaker till October 25, during which period the House remained rudderless, unable to govern.
Two Representatives, Steve Scalise, a known white supremacist, and Jim Jordan, a prime mover behind Trump’s January 6 insurrection, tried to win the coveted post, but failed to win the necessary majority of votes in their own Party.
After three weeks of chaos, Republicans finally settled on little-known, hard right back-bencher from Louisiana, Mike Johnson, 51, as Speaker. Johnson, an ardent Trumper, with less than seven years of political experience in Washington DC, now holds the post second in line from the presidency, after Vice President Kamala Harris.
Johnson believes the 2020 election was stolen. He also voted against certifying the election after the insurrection on January 6, 2021.
“I think he’s going to be a fantastic Speaker”, Trump said on Wednesday, from the New York courthouse where he’s on trial for business fraud.
Indeed, he’s the ideal Speaker for the Christian, white supremacist, rogue’s gallery that is today’s Republican Party. Johnson opposes reproductive rights for women, LGBTQ rights, gay marriage, and favors every item endorsed by the radical right, white, Christian agenda, including cuts to Social Security and Medicare.
In an interview last week, Johnson said, “I am a Bible-believing Christian. People wonder what Mike Johnson thinks about any issue under the sun. Well, I said, go pick up a Bible off your shelf and read it. That’s my worldview”.
Johnson got off to a flying, hard-right start with his first act as Speaker. He separated President Biden’s proposal of $ 105 billion to fund Israel ($14 billion) and Ukraine ($61 billion), approving funding of $14 billion to Israel, but zero to Ukraine,
The $14 billion aid to Israel also depends on cutting the funding for the tax department (IRS) for the employment of extra staff to police the super-wealthy and the corporations, who will continue to cheat on their taxes. A despicable political stunt that makes humanitarian and military aid to US allies a pawn in the radical-right agenda.
The date of the next government shut-down is just two weeks away, on November 17. The temporary extension of the budget, which kept the government functioning against the will of the Republican hard-right, caused the historic removal of Speaker McCarthy. I wonder what Biblical instructions the Almighty has up His sleeve for Speaker Johnson on this issue, the result of which will affect the lives of all Americans. God only knows.
Features
Building on Sand: The Indian market trap
(Part III in a series on Sri Lanka’s tourism stagnation.)
Every SLTDA (Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority) press release now leads with the same headline: India is Sri Lanka’s “star market.” The numbers seem to prove it, 531,511 Indian arrivals in 2025, representing 22.5% of all tourists. Officials celebrate the “half-million milestone” and set targets for 600,000, 700,000, more.
But follow the money instead of the headcount, and a different picture emerges. We are building our tourism recovery on a low-spending, short-stay, operationally challenging segment, without any serious strategy to transform it into a high-value market. We have confused market size with market quality, and the confusion is costing us billions.
Per-day spending: While SLTDA does not publish market-specific daily expenditure data, industry operators and informal analyses consistently report Indian tourists in the $100-140 per day range, compared to $180-250 for Western European and North American markets.
The math is brutal and unavoidable: one Western European tourist generates the revenue of 3-4 Indian tourists. Building tourism recovery primarily on the low-yield segment is strategically incoherent, unless the goal is arrivals theater rather than economic contribution.
Comparative Analysis: How Competitors Handle Indian Outbound Tourism
India is not unique to Sri Lanka. Indian outbound tourism reached 30.23 million departures in 2024, an 8.4% year-on-year increase, driven by a growing middle class with disposable income. Every competitor destination is courting this market.
This is not diversification. It is concentration risk dressed up as growth.
How did we end up here? Through a combination of policy laziness, proximity bias, and refusal to confront yield trade-offs.
1. Proximity as Strategy Substitute
India is next door. Flights are short (1.5-3 hours), frequent, and cheap. This makes India the easiest market to attract, low promotional cost, high visibility, strong cultural and linguistic overlap. But easiest is not the same as best.
Tourism strategy should optimize for yield-adjusted effort. Yes, attracting Europeans requires longer promotional cycles, higher marketing spend, and sustained brand-building. But if each European generates 3x the revenue of an Indian tourist, the return on investment is self-evident.
We have chosen ease over effectiveness, proximity over profitability.
2. Visa Policy as Blunt Instrument
3. Failure to Develop High-Value Products for Indian Market

There are segments of Indian outbound tourism that spend heavily:
* Wedding tourism: Indian destination weddings can generate $50,000-200,000+ per event
* Wellness/Ayurveda tourism: High-net-worth Indians seek authentic wellness experiences and will pay premium rates
* MICE tourism: Corporate events, conferences, incentive travel
Sri Lanka has these assets—coastal venues for weddings, Ayurvedic heritage, colonial hotels suitable for corporate events. But we have not systematically developed and marketed these products to high-yield Indian segments.
For the first time in 2025, Sri Lanka conducted multi-city roadshows across India to promote wedding tourism. This is welcome—but it is 25 years late. The Maldives and Mauritius have been curating Indian wedding and MICE tourism for decades, building specialised infrastructure, training staff, and integrating these products into marketing.
We are entering a mature market with no track record, no specialised infrastructure, and no price positioning that signals premium quality.
4. Operational Challenges and Quality Perceptions
Indian tourists, particularly budget segments, present operational challenges:
* Shorter stays mean higher turnover, more check-ins, more logistical overhead per dollar of revenue
* Price sensitivity leads to aggressive bargaining, complaints over perceived overcharging
* Large groups (families, wedding parties) require specialised handling
None of these are insurmountable, but they require investment in training, systems, and service design. Sri Lanka has not made these investments systematically. The result: operators report higher operational costs per Indian guest while generating lower revenue, a toxic margin squeeze.
Additionally, Sri Lanka’s positioning as a “budget-friendly” destination reinforces price expectations. Indians comparing Sri Lanka to Thailand or Malaysia see Sri Lanka as cheaper, not better. We compete on price, not value, a race to the bottom.
The Strategic Error: Mistaking Market Size for Market Fit
India’s outbound tourism market is massive, 30 million+ and growing. But scale is not the same as fit.
Market size ≠ market value: The UAE attracts 7.5 million Indians, but as a high-yield segment (business, luxury shopping, upscale hospitality). Saudi Arabia attracts 3.3 million—but for religious pilgrimage with high per-capita spending and long stays.
Thailand attracts 1.8 million Indians as part of a diversified 35-million-tourist base. Indians represent 5% of Thailand’s mix. Sri Lanka has made Indians 22.5% of our mix, 4.5 times Thailand’s concentration, while generating a fraction of Thailand’s revenue.
This reveals the error. We have prioritised volume from a market segment without ensuring the segment aligns with our value proposition.
These needs are misaligned. Indians seek budget value; Sri Lanka needs yield. Indians want short trips; Sri Lanka needs extended stays. Indians are price-sensitive; Sri Lanka needs premium segments to fund infrastructure.
We have attracted a market that does not match our strategic needs—and then celebrated the mismatch as success.
The Way Forward: From Dependency to Diversification
Fixing the Indian market trap requires three shifts: curation, diversification, and premium positioning.
First
, segment the Indian market and target high-value niches explicitly:
* Wedding tourism: Develop specialised wedding venues, train planners, create integrated packages ($50k+ per event)
* Wellness tourism: Position Sri Lanka as authentic Ayurveda destination for high-net-worth health seekers
* MICE tourism: Target Indian corporate incentive travel and conferences
* Spiritual/religious tourism: Leverage Buddhist and Hindu heritage sites with premium positioning
Market these high-value niches aggressively. Let budget segments self-select out through pricing signals.
Second
, rebalance market mix toward high-yield segments:
* Increase marketing spend on Western Europe, North America, and East Asian premium segments
* Develop products (luxury eco-lodges, boutique heritage hotels, adventure tourism) that appeal to high-yield travelers
* Use visa policy strategically, maintain visa-free for premium markets, consider tiered visa fees or curated visa schemes for volume markets
Third
, stop benchmarking success by Indian arrival volumes. Track:
* Revenue per Indian visitor
* Indian market share of total revenue (not arrivals)
* Yield gap: Indian revenue vs. other major markets
If Indians are 22.5% of arrivals but only 15% of revenue, we have a problem. If the gap widens, we are deepening dependency on a low-yield segment.
Fourth
, invest in Indian market quality rather than quantity:
* Train staff on Indian high-end expectations (luxury service standards, dietary needs)
* Develop bilingual guides and materials (Hindi, Tamil)
* Build partnerships with premium Indian travel agents, not budget consolidators
We should aim to attract 300,000 Indians generating $1,500 per trip (through wedding, wellness, MICE targeting), not 700,000 generating $600 per trip. The former produces $450 million; the latter produces $420 million, while requiring more than twice the operational overhead and infrastructure load.
Fifth
, accept the hard truth: India cannot and should not be 30-40% of our market mix. The structural yield constraints make that model non-viable. Cap Indian arrivals at 15-20% of total mix and aggressively diversify into higher-yield markets.
This will require political courage, saying “no” to easy volume in favour of harder-won value. But that is what strategy means: choosing what not to do.
The Dependency Trap

Every market concentration creates path dependency. The more we optimize for Indian tourists, visa schemes, marketing, infrastructure, pricing, the harder it becomes to attract high-yield markets that expect different value propositions.
Hotels that compete on price for Indian segments cannot simultaneously position as luxury for European segments. Destinations known for “affordability” struggle to pivot to premium. Guides trained for high-turnover, short-stay groups do not develop the deep knowledge required for extended cultural tours.
We are locking in a low-yield equilibrium. Each incremental Indian arrival strengthens the positioning as a “budget-friendly” destination, which repels high-yield segments, which forces further volume-chasing in price-sensitive markets. The cycle reinforces itself.
Breaking the cycle requires accepting short-term pain—lower arrival numbers—for long-term gain—higher revenue, stronger positioning, sustainable margins.
The Hard Question
Is Sri Lanka willing to attract two million tourists generating $5 billion, or three million tourists generating $4 billion?
The current trajectory is toward the latter, more arrivals, less revenue, thinner margins, greater fragility. We are optimizing for metrics that impress press releases but erode economic contribution.
The Indian market is not the problem. The problem is building tourism recovery primarily on a low-yield segment without strategies to either transform that segment to high-yield or balance it with high-yield markets.
We are building on sand. The foundation will not hold.
(The writer, a senior Chartered Accountant and professional banker, is Professor at SLIIT, Malabe. The views and opinions expressed in this article are personal.)
Features
Digital transformation in the Global South
Understanding Sri Lanka through the India AI Impact Summit 2026
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has rapidly moved from being a specialised technological field into a major social force that shapes economies, cultures, governance, and everyday human life. The India AI Impact Summit 2026, held in New Delhi, symbolised a significant moment for the Global South, especially South Asia, because it demonstrated that artificial intelligence is no longer limited to advanced Western economies but can also become a development tool for emerging societies. The summit gathered governments, researchers, technology companies, and international organisations to discuss how AI can support social welfare, public services, and economic growth. Its central message was that artificial intelligence should be human centred and socially useful. Instead of focusing only on powerful computing systems, the summit emphasised affordable technologies, open collaboration, and ethical responsibility so that ordinary citizens can benefit from digital transformation. For South Asia, where large populations live in rural areas and resources are unevenly distributed, this idea is particularly important.
People friendly AI
One of the most important concepts promoted at the summit was the idea of “people friendly AI.” This means that artificial intelligence should be accessible, understandable, and helpful in daily activities. In South Asia, language diversity and economic inequality often prevent people from using advanced technology. Therefore, systems designed for local languages, and smartphones, play a crucial role. When a farmer can speak to a digital assistant in Sinhala, Tamil, or Hindi and receive advice about weather patterns or crop diseases, technology becomes practical rather than distant. Similarly, voice based interfaces allow elderly people and individuals with limited literacy to use digital services. Affordable mobile based AI tools reduce the digital divide between urban and rural populations. As a result, artificial intelligence stops being an elite instrument and becomes a social assistant that supports ordinary life.
Transformation in education sector
The influence of this transformation is visible in education. AI based learning platforms can analyse student performance and provide personalised lessons. Instead of all students following the same pace, weaker learners receive additional practice while advanced learners explore deeper material. Teachers are able to focus on mentoring and explanation rather than repetitive instruction. In many South Asian societies, including Sri Lanka, education has long depended on memorisation and private tuition classes. AI tutoring systems could reduce educational inequality by giving rural students access to learning resources, similar to those available in cities. A student who struggles with mathematics, for example, can practice step by step exercises automatically generated according to individual mistakes. This reduces pressure, improves confidence, and gradually changes the educational culture from rote learning toward understanding and problem solving.
Healthcare is another area where AI is becoming people friendly. Many rural communities face shortages of doctors and medical facilities. AI-assisted diagnostic tools can analyse symptoms, or medical images, and provide early warnings about diseases. Patients can receive preliminary advice through mobile applications, which helps them decide whether hospital visits are necessary. This reduces overcrowding in hospitals and saves travel costs. Public health authorities can also analyse large datasets to monitor disease outbreaks and allocate resources efficiently. In this way, artificial intelligence supports not only individual patients but also the entire health system.
Agriculture, which remains a primary livelihood for millions in South Asia, is also undergoing transformation. Farmers traditionally rely on seasonal experience, but climate change has made weather patterns unpredictable. AI systems that analyse rainfall data, soil conditions, and satellite images can predict crop performance and recommend irrigation schedules. Early detection of plant diseases prevents large-scale crop losses. For a small farmer, accurate information can mean the difference between profit and debt. Thus, AI directly influences economic stability at the household level.
Employment and communication reshaped
Artificial intelligence is also reshaping employment and communication. Routine clerical and repetitive tasks are increasingly automated, while demand grows for digital skills, such as data management, programming, and online services. Many young people in South Asia are beginning to participate in remote work, freelancing, and digital entrepreneurship. AI translation tools allow communication across languages, enabling businesses to reach international customers. Knowledge becomes more accessible because information can be summarised, translated, and explained instantly. This leads to a broader sociological shift: authority moves from tradition and hierarchy toward information and analytical reasoning. Individuals rely more on data when making decisions about education, finance, and career planning.
Impact on Sri Lanka
The impact on Sri Lanka is especially significant because the country shares many social and economic conditions with India and often adopts regional technological innovations. Sri Lanka has already begun integrating artificial intelligence into education, agriculture, and public administration. In schools and universities, AI learning tools may reduce the heavy dependence on private tuition and help students in rural districts receive equal academic support. In agriculture, predictive analytics can help farmers manage climate variability, improving productivity and food security. In public administration, digital systems can speed up document processing, licensing, and public service delivery. Smart transportation systems may reduce congestion in urban areas, saving time and fuel.
Economic opportunities are also expanding. Sri Lanka’s service based economy and IT outsourcing sector can benefit from increased global demand for digital skills. AI-assisted software development, data annotation, and online service platforms can create new employment pathways, especially for educated youth. Small and medium entrepreneurs can use AI tools to design products, manage finances, and market services internationally at low cost. In tourism, personalised digital assistants and recommendation systems can improve visitor experiences and help small businesses connect with travellers directly.
Digital inequality
However, the integration of artificial intelligence also raises serious concerns. Digital inequality may widen if only educated urban populations gain access to technological skills. Some routine jobs may disappear, requiring workers to retrain. There are also risks of misinformation, surveillance, and misuse of personal data. Ethical regulation and transparency are, therefore, essential. Governments must develop policies that protect privacy, ensure accountability, and encourage responsible innovation. Public awareness and digital literacy programmes are necessary so that citizens understand both the benefits and limitations of AI systems.
Beyond economics and services, AI is gradually influencing social relationships and cultural patterns. South Asian societies have traditionally relied on hierarchy and personal authority, but data-driven decision making changes this structure. Agricultural planning may depend on predictive models rather than ancestral practice, and educational evaluation may rely on learning analytics instead of examination rankings alone. This does not eliminate human judgment, but it alters its basis. Societies increasingly value analytical thinking, creativity, and adaptability. Educational systems must, therefore, move beyond memorisation toward critical thinking and interdisciplinary learning.
AI contribution to national development
In Sri Lanka, these changes may contribute to national development if implemented carefully. AI-supported financial monitoring can improve transparency and reduce corruption. Smart infrastructure systems can help manage transportation and urban planning. Communication technologies can support interaction among Sinhala, Tamil, and English speakers, promoting social inclusion in a multilingual society. Assistive technologies can improve accessibility for persons with disabilities, enabling broader participation in education and employment. These developments show that artificial intelligence is not merely a technological innovation but a social instrument capable of strengthening equality when guided by ethical policy.
Symbolic shift
Ultimately, the India AI Impact Summit 2026 represents a symbolic shift in the global technological landscape. It indicates that developing nations are beginning to shape the future of artificial intelligence according to their own social needs rather than passively importing technology. For South Asia and Sri Lanka, the challenge is not whether AI will arrive but how it will be used. If education systems prepare citizens, if governments establish responsible regulations, and if access remains inclusive, AI can become a partner in development rather than a source of inequality. The future will likely involve close collaboration between humans and intelligent systems, where machines assist decision making while human values guide outcomes. In this sense, artificial intelligence does not replace human society, but transforms it, offering Sri Lanka an opportunity to build a more knowledge based, efficient, and equitable social order in the decades ahead.
by Milinda Mayadunna
Features
Governance cannot be a postscript to economics
The visit by IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva to Sri Lanka was widely described as a success for the government. She was fulsome in her praise of the country and its developmental potential. The grounds for this success and collaborative spirit go back to the inception of the agreement signed in March 2023 in the aftermath of Sri Lanka’s declaration of international bankruptcy. The IMF came in to fulfil its role as lender of last resort. The government of the day bit the bullet. It imposed unpopular policies on the people, most notably significant tax increases. At a moment when the country had run out of foreign exchange, defaulted on its debt, and faced shortages of fuel, medicine and food, the IMF programme restored a measure of confidence both within the country and internationally.
Since 1965 Sri Lanka has entered into agreements with the IMF on 16 occasions none of which were taken to their full term. The present agreement is the 17th agreement . IMF agreements have traditionally been focused on economic restructuring. Invariably the terms of agreement have been harsh on the people, with priority being given to ensure the debtor country pays its loans back to the IMF. Fiscal consolidation, tax increases, subsidy reductions and structural reforms have been the recurring features. The social and political costs have often been high. Governments have lost popularity and sometimes fallen before programmes were completed. The IMF has learned from experience across the world that macroeconomic reform without social protection can generate backlash, instability and policy reversals.
The experience of countries such as Greece, Ireland and Portugal in dealing with the IMF during the eurozone crisis demonstrated the political and social costs of austerity, even though those economies later stabilised and returned to growth. The evolution of IMF policies has ensured that there are two special features in the present agreement. The first is that the IMF has included a safety net of social welfare spending to mitigate the impact of the austerity measures on the poorest sections of the population. No country can hope to grow at 7 or 8 percent per annum when a third of its people are struggling to survive. Poverty alleviation measures in the Aswesuma programme, developed with the agreement of the IMF, are key to mitigating the worst impacts of the rising cost of living and limited opportunities for employment.
Governance Included
The second important feature of the IMF agreement is the inclusion of governance criteria to be implemented alongside the economic reforms. It goes to the heart of why Sri Lanka has had to return to the IMF repeatedly. Economic mismanagement did not take place in a vacuum. It was enabled by weak institutions, politicised decision making, non-transparent procurement, and the erosion of checks and balances. In its economic reform process, the IMF has included an assessment of governance related issues to accompany the economic restructuring process. At the top of this list is tackling the problem of corruption by means of publicising contracts, ensuring open solicitation of tenders, and strengthening financial accountability mechanisms.
The IMF also encouraged a civil society diagnostic study and engaged with civil society organisations regularly. The civil society analysis of governance issues which was promoted by Verite Research and facilitated by Transparency International was wider in scope than those identified in the IMF’s own diagnostic. It pointed to systemic weaknesses that go beyond narrow fiscal concerns. The civil society diagnostic study included issues of social justice such as the inequitable impact of targeting EPF and ETF funds of workers for restructuring and the need to repeal abuse prone laws such as the Prevention of Terrorism Act and the Online Safety Act. When workers see their retirement savings restructured without adequate consultation, confidence in policy making erodes. When laws are perceived to be instruments of arbitrary power, social cohesion weakens.
During a meeting between the IMF Managing Director Georgeiva and civil society members last week, there was discussion on the implementation of those governance measures in which she spoke in a manner that was not alien to the civil society representatives. Significantly, the civil society diagnostic report also referred to the ethnic conflict and the breakdown of interethnic relations that led to three decades of deadly war, causing severe economic losses to the country. This was also discussed at the meeting. Governance is not only about accounting standards and procurement rules. It is about social justice, equality before the law, and political representation. On this issue the government has more to do. Ethnic and religious minorities find themselves inadequately represented in high level government committees. The provincial council system that ensured ethnic and minority representation at the provincial level continues to be in abeyance.
Beyond IMF
The significance of addressing governance issues is not only relevant to the IMF agreement. It is also important in accessing tariff concessions from the European Union. The GSP Plus tariff concession given by the EU enables Sri Lankan exports to be sold at lower prices and win markets in Europe. For an export dependent economy, this is critical. Loss of such concessions would directly affect employment in key sectors such as apparel. The government needs to address longstanding EU concerns about the protection of human rights and labour rights in the country. The EU has, for several years, linked the continuation of GSP Plus to compliance with international conventions. This includes the condition that the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) be brought into line with international standards. The government’s alternative in the form of the draft Protection of the State from Terrorism Act (PTSA) is less abusive on paper but is wider in scope and retains the core features of the PTA.
Governance and social justice factors cannot be ignored or downplayed in the pursuit of economic development. If Sri Lanka is to break out of its cycle of crisis and bailout, it must internalise the fact that good governance which promotes social justice and more fairly distributes the costs and fruits of development is the foundation on which durable economic growth is built. Without it, stabilisation will remain fragile, poverty will remain high, and the promise of 7 to 8 percent growth will remain elusive. The implementation of governance reforms will also have a positive effect through the creative mechanism of governance linked bonds, an innovation of the present IMF agreement.
The Sri Lankan think tank Verité Research played an important role in the development of governance linked bonds. They reduce the rate of interest payable by the government on outstanding debt on the basis that better governance leads to a reduction in risk for those who have lent their money to Sri Lanka. This is a direct financial reward for governance reform. The present IMF programme offers an opportunity not only to stabilise the economy but to strengthen the institutions that underpin it. That opportunity needs to be taken. Without it, the country cannot attract investment, expand exports and move towards shared prosperity and to a 7-8 percent growth rate that can lift the country out of its debt trap.
by Jehan Perera
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